Wednesday, February 20, 2013

An Interface-Driven Stiffening Mechanism in Polymer Nanocomposites


Dynamic mechanical response in responsive and adaptive composites can be achieved either through the responsive polymer; with the chemical regulators affecting the bonding between fillers or through reversible covalent bonding. Tuning the interfaces between fillers and polymer matrix potentially plays a critical role in all these systems to enhance their adaptive responses. Here, we present that the bonding–debonding of chains on nanoparticles can be modulated under extensive periodic strains. Mechanical response of an attractive model polymer composite, poly(methyl methacrylate) filled with silica nanoparticles, is monitored in a series of deformation–resting experiments allowing us to tune the interfacial strength of polymer. Chains that are desorbed from the surface with the oscillatory shear entangle with the free chains during the rest time. We show that periodic deformation process results in unusual stiffening of composites. Mechanical response during the recovery reveals this behavior arising from the enhancement in the entanglement of chains at interfaces. The interfacial hardening can be used in designing polymer composites with stress-sensitive interfaces to achieve new repair mechanisms for biomedical applications, and also in energy absorbing reinforced systems.

Interesting paper on the stiffening of composites based on periodic input stress.
Pamela N. Nge, Chad I. Rogers, and Adam T. Woolley
Introduction:Microfluidics consist of microfabricated structures for liquid
handling, with cross sections in the 1−500 μm range and small
volume capacity (femtoliter to nanoliter). Capillary tubes
connected with fittings,1 although utilizing small volumes, are
not considered microfluidics for the purposes of this paper
since they are not microfabricated. Likewise, millifluidic systems
made by conventional machining tools are excluded due to
their larger feature sizes (>500 μm).

A nice review of Microfluidics just got ASAP.


Solid-State NMR on Bacterial Cells: Selective Cell Wall Signal Enhancement and Resolution Improvement using Dynamic Nuclear Polarization


Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) enhanced solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has recently emerged as a powerful technique for the study of material surfaces. In this study, we demonstrate its potential to investigate cell surface in intact cells. Using Bacillus subtilis bacterial cells as an example, it is shown that the polarizing agent 1-(TEMPO-4-oxy)-3-(TEMPO-4-amino)propan-2-ol (TOTAPOL) has a strong binding affinity to cell wall polymers (peptidoglycan). This particular interaction is thoroughly investigated with a systematic study on extracted cell wall materials, disrupted cells, and entire cells, which proved that TOTAPOL is mainly accumulating in the cell wall. This property is used on one hand to selectively enhance or suppress cell wall signals by controlling radical concentrations and on the other hand to improve spectral resolution by means of a difference spectrum. Comparing DNP-enhanced and conventional solid-state NMR, an absolute sensitivity ratio of 24 was obtained on the entire cell sample. This important increase in sensitivity together with the possibility of enhancing specifically cell wall signals and improving resolution really opens new avenues for the use of DNP-enhanced solid-state NMR as an on-cell investigation tool.

Responsive biomimetic networks from polyisocyanopeptide hydrogels


  • Paul H. J. Kouwer,
  • Matthieu Koepf,
  • Vincent A. A. Le Sage,
  • Maarten Jaspers,
  • Arend M. van Buul,
  • Zaskia H. Eksteen-Akeroyd,
  • Tim Woltinge,
  • Erik Schwartz,
  • Heather J. Kitto,
  • Richard Hoogenboom,
  • Stephen J. Picken,
  • Roeland J. M. Nolte,
  • Eduardo Mendes
  • Alan E. Rowan
  • Mechanical responsiveness is essential to all biological systems down to the level of tissues and cells1, 2. The intra- and extracellular mechanics of such systems are governed by a series of proteins, such as microtubules, actin, intermediate filaments and collagen3, 4. As a general design motif, these proteins self-assemble into helical structures and superstructures that differ in diameter and persistence length to cover the full mechanical spectrum1. Gels of cytoskeletal proteins display particular mechanical responses (stress stiffening) that until now have been absent in synthetic polymeric and low-molar-mass gels. Here we present synthetic gels that mimic in nearly all aspects gels prepared from intermediate filaments. They are prepared from polyisocyanopeptides5, 6, 7 grafted with oligo(ethylene glycol) side chains. These responsive polymers possess a stiff and helical architecture, and show a tunable thermal transition where the chains bundle together to generate transparent gels at extremely low concentrations. Using characterization techniques operating at different length scales (for example, macroscopic rheology, atomic force microscopy and molecular force spectroscopy) combined with an appropriate theoretical network model8, 9, 10, we establish the hierarchical relationship between the bulk mechanical properties and the single-molecule parameters. Our results show that to develop artificial cytoskeletal or extracellular matrix mimics, the essential design parameters are not only the molecular stiffness, but also the extent of bundling. In contrast to the peptidic materials, our polyisocyanide polymers are readily modified, giving a starting point for functional biomimetic hydrogels with potentially a wide variety of applications11, 12, 13, 14, in particular in the biomedical field.

    Nature 493 651 doi: 10.1038/nature11839

    This is a pretty cool polymer system in terms of supramolecular structure and mechanical properties.

    Friday, February 1, 2013

    Revisiting the Hammett ρ Parameter for the Determination of Philicity: Nucleophilic Substitution with Inverse Charge Interaction

    Recent work identified a fascinating charge/FMO control dichotomy in oxidations of substituted phenyl sulfoxides. A great read for those interested in FMO theory, the role of partial charges in controlling reaction pathways, and/or linear free energy relationships.



    Abstract

    Too OT to handle? In oxygen transfer (OT) reactions the inversion of the ρ value is not representative of a change in mechanism. Substituents bonded to aromatic sulfoxides have the opposite effect on the rates of oxidation depending on whether the reaction is dominated by electrostatic or orbital-overlap effects (see picture).

    DOI Link