1,667 results on '"Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry"'
Search Results
2. Droplet-based assembly of magnetic superballs
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Schyck, S., Meijer, J. M., M Schelling, M. P., Petukhov, A. V., Rossi, L., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Schyck, S., Meijer, J. M., M Schelling, M. P., Petukhov, A. V., and Rossi, L.
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- 2024
3. Deformation of confined liquid interfaces by inhomogeneous electric fields and localized particle forces
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Rogier, Faranaaz, Shao, Wan, Guo, Yuanyuan, Zhuang, Lei, Kegel, Willem K., Groenewold, Jan, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Rogier, Faranaaz, Shao, Wan, Guo, Yuanyuan, Zhuang, Lei, Kegel, Willem K., and Groenewold, Jan
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- 2024
4. Roll-to-Roll Fabrication of Bijels via Solvent Transfer Induced Phase Separation (R2R-STrIPS)
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Siegel, Henrik, de Ruiter, Mariska, Athanasiou, Georgios, Hesseling, Cos, Haase, Martin, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Siegel, Henrik, de Ruiter, Mariska, Athanasiou, Georgios, Hesseling, Cos, and Haase, Martin
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- 2024
5. Peak-ring magnetism: Rock and mineral magnetic properties of the Chicxulub impact crater
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Paleomagnetism, Mendes, Bruno Daniel Leite, Kontny, Agnes, Poelchau, Michael, Fischer, Lennart A., Gaus, Ksenia, Dudzisz, Katarzyna, Kuipers, Bonny W.M., Dekkers, Mark J., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Paleomagnetism, Mendes, Bruno Daniel Leite, Kontny, Agnes, Poelchau, Michael, Fischer, Lennart A., Gaus, Ksenia, Dudzisz, Katarzyna, Kuipers, Bonny W.M., and Dekkers, Mark J.
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- 2024
6. Interplay of electrokinetic effects in nonpolar solvents for electronic paper displays
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Khorsand Ahmadi, Mohammad, Liu, Wei, Groenewold, Jan, den Toonder, Jaap M.J., Henzen, Alex, Wyss, Hans M., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Khorsand Ahmadi, Mohammad, Liu, Wei, Groenewold, Jan, den Toonder, Jaap M.J., Henzen, Alex, and Wyss, Hans M.
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- 2024
7. Asymmetrical Dependence of {Ba2+}:{SO42–} on BaSO4 Crystal Nucleation and Growth in Aqueous Solutions: A Dynamic Light Scattering Study
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Seepma, Sergěj Y. M. H., Kuipers, Bonny W. M., Wolthers, Mariette, Geochemistry of Earth materials, Geochemistry, and Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry
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Chemistry(all) ,General Chemical Engineering ,Chemical Engineering(all) ,SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy ,General Chemistry - Abstract
The impact of solution stoichiometry, upon formation of BaSO4 crystals in 0.02 M NaCl suspensions, on the development of particle size was investigated using dynamic light scattering (DLS). Measurements were performed on a set of suspensions prepared with predefined initial supersaturation, based on the quotient of the constituent ion activity product {Ba2+}{SO42-} over the solubility product Ksp (Ωbarite = {Ba2+}{SO42-}/Ksp = 100, 500, or 1000-11,000 in steps of 1000), and ion activity solution stoichiometries (raq = {Ba2+}:{SO42-} = 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10 and 100), at circumneutral pH of 5.5-6.0, and ambient temperature and pressure. DLS showed that for batch experiments, crystal formation with varying raq was best investigated at an initial Ωbarite of 1000 and using the forward detection angle. At this Ωbarite and set of raq, the average apparent hydrodynamic particle size of the largest population present in all suspensions increased from ∼200 to ∼700 nm within 10-15 min and was independently confirmed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) imaging. Additional DLS measurements conducted at the same conditions in flow confirmed that the BaSO4 formation kinetics were very fast for our specifically chosen conditions. The DLS flow measurements, monitoring the first minute of BaSO4 formation, showed strong signs of aggregation of prenucleation clusters forming particles with a size in the range of 200-300 nm for every raq. The estimated initial bulk growth rates from batch DLS results show that BaSO4 crystals formed fastest at near-stoichiometric conditions and more slowly at nonstoichiometric conditions. Moreover, at extreme SO4-limiting conditions, barite formation was slower compared to Ba-limiting conditions. Our results show that DLS can be used to investigate nucleation and growth at carefully selected experimental and analytical conditions. The combined DLS and TEM results imply that BaSO4 formation is influenced by solution stoichiometry and may aid to optimize antiscalant efficiency and regulate BaSO4 (scale) formation processes.
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- 2023
8. Extending the dynamic temperature range of Boltzmann thermometers
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van Swieten, Thomas Pieter, Steenhoff, Jesse Merlijn, Vlasblom, Auke, de Berg, Ravi, Mattern, Sam Pieter, Rabouw, Freddy Teunis, Suta, Markus, Meijerink, Andries, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, and Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis
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Atomic and Molecular Physics ,Electronic ,Optical and Magnetic Materials ,and Optics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
Lanthanide-doped (nano)crystals are an important class of materials in luminescence thermometry. The working mechanism of these thermometers is diverse but most often relies on variation of the ratio of emission intensities from two thermally coupled excited states with temperature. At low temperatures, nonradiative coupling between the states can be slow compared to radiative decay, but, at higher temperatures, the two states reach thermal equilibrium due to faster nonradiative coupling. In thermal equilibrium, the intensity ratio follows Boltzmann statistics, which gives a convenient model to calibrate the thermometer. Here, we investigate multiple strategies to shift the onset of thermal equilibrium to lower temperatures, which enables Boltzmann thermometry in a wider dynamic range. We use Eu3+-doped microcrystals as a model system and find that the nonradiative coupling rates increase for host lattices with higher vibrational energies and shorter lanthanide–ligand distances, which reduces the onset temperature of thermal equilibrium by more than 400 K. We additionally reveal that thermometers with excited states coupled by electric-dipole transitions have lower onset temperatures than those with magnetic-dipole-coupled states due to selection rules. These insights provide essential guidelines for the optimization of Boltzmann thermometers to operate in an extended temperature range.
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- 2022
9. Asymmetrical dependence of {Ba2+}:{SO42–} on BaSO4 crystal nucleation and growth in aqueous solutions: A dynamic light scattering study
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Geochemistry of Earth materials, Geochemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Seepma, Sergěj Y. M. H., Kuipers, Bonny W. M., Wolthers, Mariette, Geochemistry of Earth materials, Geochemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Seepma, Sergěj Y. M. H., Kuipers, Bonny W. M., and Wolthers, Mariette
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- 2023
10. Exploiting anisotropic particle shape to electrostatically assemble colloidal molecules with high yield and purity
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Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Shelke, Yogesh, Marín-Aguilar, Susana, Camerin, Fabrizio, Dijkstra, Marjolein, Kraft, Daniela J., Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Shelke, Yogesh, Marín-Aguilar, Susana, Camerin, Fabrizio, Dijkstra, Marjolein, and Kraft, Daniela J.
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- 2023
11. The Formation of NaYF4: Er3+, Yb3+ Nanocrystals Studied by In Situ X-ray Scattering: Phase Transition and Size Focusing
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Prins, P. Tim, van der Bok, Johanna C., van Swieten, Thomas P., Hinterding, Stijn O.M., Smith, Andy J., Petukhov, Andrei V., Meijerink, Andries, Rabouw, Freddy T., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Prins, P. Tim, van der Bok, Johanna C., van Swieten, Thomas P., Hinterding, Stijn O.M., Smith, Andy J., Petukhov, Andrei V., Meijerink, Andries, and Rabouw, Freddy T.
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- 2023
12. Cooperative transitions involving hydrophobic polyelectrolytes
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Martin Robinson, James L., Kegel, Willem K., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Martin Robinson, James L., and Kegel, Willem K.
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- 2023
13. Which Ion Dominates the Temperature and Pressure Response of Halide Perovskites and Elpasolites?
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Muscarella, Loreta A., Jöbsis, Huygen J., Baumgartner, Bettina, Prins, P. Tim, Maaskant, D. Nicolette, Petukhov, Andrei V., Chernyshov, Dmitry, McMonagle, Charles J., Hutter, Eline M., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Muscarella, Loreta A., Jöbsis, Huygen J., Baumgartner, Bettina, Prins, P. Tim, Maaskant, D. Nicolette, Petukhov, Andrei V., Chernyshov, Dmitry, McMonagle, Charles J., and Hutter, Eline M.
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- 2023
14. Is there a difference between surfactant-stabilised and Pickering emulsions?
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Dekker, Riande I., Velandia, Santiago F., Kibbelaar, Heleen V.M., Morcy, Azeza, Sadtler, Véronique, Roques-Carmes, Thibault, Groenewold, Jan, Kegel, Willem K., Velikov, Krassimir P., Bonn, Daniel, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Dekker, Riande I., Velandia, Santiago F., Kibbelaar, Heleen V.M., Morcy, Azeza, Sadtler, Véronique, Roques-Carmes, Thibault, Groenewold, Jan, Kegel, Willem K., Velikov, Krassimir P., and Bonn, Daniel
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- 2023
15. Transcription factor competition facilitates self-sustained oscillations in single gene genetic circuits
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Dep Wiskunde, Sub Algemeen Math. Inst, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Landman, Jasper, Verduyn Lunel, Sjoerd M., Kegel, Willem K., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Dep Wiskunde, Sub Algemeen Math. Inst, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Landman, Jasper, Verduyn Lunel, Sjoerd M., and Kegel, Willem K.
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- 2023
16. Mesoporous colloidal silica cubes with catalytically active cores
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sprockel, Alessio J., Dekker, Frans, Tuinier, Remco, Philipse, Albert P., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sprockel, Alessio J., Dekker, Frans, Tuinier, Remco, and Philipse, Albert P.
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- 2023
17. Capacitive charging rate dependence of heat from porous carbon in aqueous salt solution
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Vos, Joren, Erne, Ben, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Vos, Joren, and Erne, Ben
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- 2023
18. Reactivity of Fe(III)-containing pyrophosphate salts with phenolics: complexation, oxidation, and surface interaction
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Bijlsma, Judith, Moslehi, Neshat, Velikov, Krassimir P., Kegel, Willem K., Vincken, Jean Paul, de Bruijn, Wouter J.C., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Bijlsma, Judith, Moslehi, Neshat, Velikov, Krassimir P., Kegel, Willem K., Vincken, Jean Paul, and de Bruijn, Wouter J.C.
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- 2023
19. Fabrication of bijels with sub-micron domains via a single-channel flow device
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sprockel, Alessio J., Khan, Mohd A., de Ruiter, Mariska, Alting, Meyer T., Macmillan, Katherine A., Haase, Martin F., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sprockel, Alessio J., Khan, Mohd A., de Ruiter, Mariska, Alting, Meyer T., Macmillan, Katherine A., and Haase, Martin F.
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- 2023
20. Flexible Colloidal Molecules with Directional Bonds and Controlled Flexibility
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Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Shelke, Yogesh, Camerin, Fabrizio, Marín-Aguilar, Susana, Verweij, Ruben W., Dijkstra, Marjolein, Kraft, Daniela J., Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Shelke, Yogesh, Camerin, Fabrizio, Marín-Aguilar, Susana, Verweij, Ruben W., Dijkstra, Marjolein, and Kraft, Daniela J.
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- 2023
21. Multivalent Fucosides Targeting β-Propeller Lectins from Lung Pathogens with Promising Anti-Adhesive Properties
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Duca, Margherita, Haksar, Diksha, van Neer, Jacq, Thies-Weesie, Dominique M E, Martínez-Alarcón, Dania, de Cock, Hans, Varrot, Annabelle, Pieters, Roland J, Molecular Microbiology, Afd Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery, Sub Molecular Microbiology, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Molecular Microbiology, Afd Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery, Sub Molecular Microbiology, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
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Lectins ,Adhesives ,Aspergillus fumigatus ,Molecular Medicine ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Lung ,Fucose - Abstract
Fungal and bacterial pathogens causing lung infections often use lectins to mediate adhesion to glycoconjugates at the surface of host tissues. Given the rapid emergence of resistance to the treatments in current use, β-propeller lectins such as FleA from Aspergillus fumigatus, SapL1 from Scedosporium apiospermum, and BambL from Burkholderia ambifaria have become appealing targets for the design of anti-adhesive agents. In search of novel and cheap anti-infectious agents, we synthesized multivalent compounds that can display up to 20 units of fucose, the natural ligand. We obtained nanomolar inhibitors that are several orders of magnitude stronger than their monovalent analogue according to several biophysical techniques (i.e., fluorescence polarization, isothermal titration calorimetry, and bio-layer interferometry). The reason for high affinity might be attributed to a strong aggregating mechanism, which was examined by analytical ultracentrifugation. Notably, the fucosylated inhibitors reduced the adhesion of A. fumigatus spores to lung epithelial cells when administered 1 h before or after the infection of human lung epithelial cells. For this reason, we propose them as promising anti-adhesive drugs for the prevention and treatment of aspergillosis and related microbial lung infections.
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- 2022
22. Electric Potential of Ions in Electrode Micropores Deduced from Calorimetry
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Vos, Joren E., Inder Maur, Danny, Rodenburg, Hendrik P., Van den Hoven, Lennart, Schoemaker, Suzan E., De jongh, Petra E., Erné, Ben H., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
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Chemistry(all) ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Physics and Astronomy(all) - Abstract
The internal energy of capacitive porous carbon electrodes was determined experimentally as a function of applied potential in aqueous salt solutions. Both the electrical work and produced heat were measured. The potential dependence of the internal energy is explained in terms of two contributions, namely the field energy of a dielectric layer of water molecules at the surface and the potential energy of ions in the pores. The average electric potential of the ions is deduced, and its dependence on the type of salt suggests that the hydration strength limits how closely ions can approach the surface.
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- 2022
23. Synthesis and Polyelectrolyte Functionalization of Hollow Fiber Membranes Formed by Solvent Transfer Induced Phase Separation
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Siegel, Henrik, Sprockel, Alessio J, Schwenger, Matthew S, Steenhoff, Jesse M, Achterhuis, Iske, de Vos, Wiebe M, Haase, Martin F, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Membrane Science & Technology, MESA+ Institute, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
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polyelectrolytes ,Materials Science(all) ,ultrafiltration ,separation membranes ,General Materials Science ,nanoparticles ,self-assembly - Abstract
Ultrafiltration membranes are important porous materials to produce freshwater in an increasingly water-scarce world. A recent approach to generate porous membranes is solvent transfer induced phase separation (STrIPS). During STrIPS, the interplay of liquid-liquid phase separation and nanoparticle self-assembly results in hollow fibers with small surface pores, ideal structures for applications as filtration membranes. However, the underlying mechanisms of the membrane formation are still poorly understood, limiting the control over structure and properties. To address this knowledge gap, we study the nonequilibrium dynamics of hollow fiber structure evolution. Confocal microscopy reveals the distribution of nanoparticles and monomers during STrIPS. Diffusion simulations are combined with measurements of the interfacial elasticity to investigate the effect of the solvent concentration on nanoparticle stabilization. Furthermore, we demonstrate the separation performance of the membrane during ultrafiltration. To this end, polyelectrolyte multilayers are deposited on the membrane, leading to tunable pores that enable the removal of dextran molecules of different molecular weights (>360 kDa, >60 kDa, >18 kDa) from a feed water stream. The resulting understanding of STrIPS and the simplicity of the synthesis process open avenues to design novel membranes for advanced separation applications.
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- 2022
24. Characterization of hen phosvitin in aqueous salt solutions: Size, structure, and aggregation
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Takeuchi, Machi, Mashima, Tsuyoshi, Sztucki, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., Vis, Mark, Friedrich, Heiner, Tuinier, Remco, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Chemical Biology, ICMS Affiliated, EAISI Health, EAISI Foundational, EIRES Systems for Sustainable Heat, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
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Phosvitin ,Chemistry(all) ,General Chemical Engineering ,Structure factor ,Chemical Engineering(all) ,Small angle X-ray scattering ,General Chemistry ,Electrostatic interaction ,Food Science - Abstract
Phosvitins is a key egg yolk protein and can often be found in food emulsions. It is highly phosphorylated and hence phosvitins contain a large number of negatively charged amino acid groups, for pH > pI. Due to the presence of these phophoserines, phosvitins bind to positively charged multivalent ions. Its amphipolar structure makes phosvitin also an efficient emulsion stabilizer. The ion binding and emulsifying abilities of phosvitins are influenced by environmental conditions such as pH and ionic strength. Various physicochemical properties of phosvitins such as size and charge under various conditions, and how they self-assemble via multivalent ions are not well-understood. To gain more insight into these physical characteristics, we performed high brilliance synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) on phosvitin solutions. The structure factor S(q) obtained from the SAXS profiles showed that the double layer interactions between charged phosvitin assemblies are strongly affected by pH and ionic strength of the buffer. The effects of multivalent ions (Mg2+, Fe3+) on the size and structure of phosvitin were also investigated. Our results revealed that the aggregation of phosvitin mediated by metal ions is induced by electrostatic attraction and only occurs beyond a threshold cation concentration, where phosvitin loses long-range electrostatic double layer repulsions. These findings help understanding the effects of metal ions and pH on phosvitin in more complex environments such as food emulsions.
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- 2022
25. Exploiting anisotropic particle shape to electrostatically assemble colloidal molecules with high yield and purity
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Shelke, Yogesh, Marín-Aguilar, Susana, Camerin, Fabrizio, Dijkstra, Marjolein, Kraft, Daniela J., Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics
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fungi ,Templated self-assembly ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Silicon Dioxide ,Ferric Compounds ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Monte Carlo simulations ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Biomaterials ,Surfaces ,Coatings and Films ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Colloidal clusters ,Electronic ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Polystyrenes ,Anisotropic shape ,Parking algorithm ,Colloids ,Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
Hypothesis: Colloidal molecules with anisotropic shapes and interactions are powerful model systems for deciphering the behavior of real molecules and building units for creating materials with designed properties. While many strategies for their assembly have been developed, they typically yield a broad distribution or are limited to a specific type. We hypothesize that the shape and relative sizes of colloidal particles can be exploited to efficiently direct their assembly into colloidal molecules of desired valence. Experiments: We exploit electrostatic self-assembly of negatively charged spheres made from either polystyrene or silica onto positively charged hematite cubes. We thoroughly analyze the role of the shape and size ratio of particles on the cluster size and yield of colloidal molecules. Findings: Using a combination of experiments and simulations, we demonstrate that cubic particle shape is crucial to generate high yields of distinct colloidal molecules over a wide variety of size ratios. We find that electrostatic repulsion between the satellite spheres is important to leverage the templating effect of the cubes, leading the spheres to preferentially assemble on the facets rather than the edges and corners of the cube. The sixfold symmetry of cubes favors the assembly of molecules with six, four, and two satellite spheres at appropriate size ratios and interaction strength. Furthermore, we reveal that our protocol is not affected by the specific choice of the material of the colloidal particles. Finally, we show that the permanent magnetic dipole moment of the hematite cubes can be utilized to separate colloidal molecules from non-assembled satellite particles. Our simple and effective strategy might be extended to other templating particle shapes, thereby greatly expanding the library of colloidal molecules that can be achieved with high yield and purity.
- Published
- 2022
26. Ethyl cellulose nanoparticles as stabilizers for Pickering emulsions
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Kibbelaar, Heleen V.M., Dekker, Riande I., Morcy, Azeza, Kegel, Willem K., Velikov, Krassimir P., Bonn, Daniel, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Matter (WZI, IoP, FNWI), and IoP (FNWI)
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Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Ethyl cellulose ,Nanoparticles ,Pickering emulsions ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Rheology ,Interfacial tension - Abstract
Pickering emulsions stabilized by ethyl cellulose nanoparticles have recently received –great attention for their remarkable stability and numerous industrial applications. De- spite this, the exact stabilization mechanism of such Pickering emulsions is still not fully understood. Both the stabilization of the emulsion by particle adsorption at the inter- face and through network formation in the continuous phase (leading to a yield stress) have been suggested. In this work we study soybean oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by ethyl cellulose nanoparticles and find, by the use of confocal microscopy and interfa- cial tension measurements, that the main stabilization mechanism of this nanoparticle- stabilized emulsions is the adsorption of the particles at the interface, instead of forming a network in the continuous phase. At the same time, oscillatory rheology measurements reveal that the emulsions exhibit a yield stress well below the random close-packing limit for hard spheres, suggesting short-range interactions between the droplets caused by the presence of the particles at the interface. The presence of the particles at the interface in combination with the observed rheological behavior of an attractive emulsion gives a strong indication for a particle-bridged stabilized emulsions.
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- 2022
27. In Situ Optical and X-ray Spectroscopy Reveals Evolution toward Mature CdSe Nanoplatelets by Synergetic Action of Myristate and Acetate Ligands
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Bok, Johanna C. van der, Prins, P. Tim, Montanarella, Federico, Maaskant, D. Nicolette, Brzesowsky, Floor A., Sluijs, Maaike M. van der, Salzmann, Bastiaan B. V., Rabouw, Freddy T., Petukhov, Andrei V., Donega, Celso De Mello, Vanmaekelbergh, Daniel, Meijerink, Andries, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical Chemistry
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Myristates ,Organic Compounds ,Quantum dots ,Spectrum Analysis ,X-Rays ,Cadmium selenide ,General Chemistry ,Acetates ,Ligands ,Myristic Acid ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Scattering ,Selenium Compounds/chemistry ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Solvents ,Cadmium Compounds/chemistry ,Cadmium - Abstract
The growth of two-dimensional platelets of the CdX family (X = S, Se, or Te) in an organic solvent requires the presence of both long- and short-chain ligands. This results in nanoplatelets of atomically precise thickness and long-chain ligand-stabilized Cd top and bottom surfaces. The platelets show a bright and spectrally pure luminescence. Despite the enormous interest in CdX platelets for optoelectronics, the growth mechanism is not fully understood. Riedinger et al. studied the reaction without a solvent and showed the favorable role for short-chain carboxylates for growth in two dimensions. Their model, based on the total energy of island nucleation, shows favored side facet growth versus growth on the top and bottom surfaces. However, several aspects of the synthesis under realistic conditions are not yet understood: Why are both short- and long-chain ligands required to obtain platelets? Why does the synthesis result in both isotropic nanocrystals and platelets? At which stage of the reaction is there bifurcation between isotropic and 2D growth? Here, we report an in situ study of the CdSe nanoplatelet reaction under practical synthesis conditions. We show that without short-chain ligands, both isotropic and mini-nanoplatelets form in the early stage of the process. However, most remaining precursors are consumed in isotropic growth. Addition of acetate induces a dramatic shift toward nearly exclusive 2D growth of already existing mini-nanoplatelets. Hence, although myristate stabilizes mini-nanoplatelets, mature nanoplatelets only grow by a subtle interplay between myristate and acetate, the latter catalyzes fast lateral growth of the side facets of the mini-nanoplatelets.
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- 2022
28. Self-assembly of colloidal superballs under spherical confinement of a drying droplet
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Schyck, Sarah, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Baldauf, Lucia, Schall, Peter, Petukhov, Andrei V., Rossi, Laura, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Matter (WZI, IoP, FNWI), ITFA (IoP, FNWI), Soft Matter and Biological Physics, Physical Chemistry, Colloidal Soft Matter, and ICMS Core
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Chemical technology ,QD450-801 ,Core-shell particles ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Small angle X-ray scattering ,Applied Physics (physics.app-ph) ,TP1-1185 ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Colloidal superballs ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Surfaces ,Coatings and Films ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Spherical confinement ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Abstract
Understanding the relationship between colloidal building block shape and self-assembled material structure is important for the development of novel materials by self-assembly. In this regard, colloidal superballs are unique building blocks because their shape can smoothly transition between spherical and cubic. Assembly of colloidal superballs under spherical confinement results in macroscopic clusters with ordered internal structure. By utilizing Small Angle X-Ray Scattering (SAXS), we probe the internal structure of colloidal superball dispersion droplets during confinement. We observe and identify four distinct drying regimes that arise during compression via evaporating droplets, and we track the development of the assembled macrostructure. As the superballs assemble, we found that they arrange into the predicted paracrystalline, rhombohedral C1-lattice that varies by the constituent superballs' shape. This provides insights in the behavior between confinement and particle shape that can be applied in the development of new functional materials., 14 pages, 5 figures, supporting info, accepted for publication in JCISOpen
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- 2022
29. Activity-induced interactions and cooperation of artificial microswimmers in one-dimensional environments
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Ketzetzi, Stefania, Rinaldin, Melissa, Dröge, Pim, Graaf, Joost de, Kraft, Daniela J, Sub Cond-Matter Theory, Stat & Comp Phys, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Theoretical Physics, Sub Cond-Matter Theory, Stat & Comp Phys, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Theoretical Physics
- Subjects
Motion ,Multidisciplinary ,Hydrodynamics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,General Chemistry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Biological microswimmers such as bacteria show collective motion that is made possible by an intricate interplay of sensing and signaling. Ketzetzi et al. reproduce this phenomenon in a catalytic system undergoing, for instance, cooperative speed-ups and dynamic reconfiguration of microswimmer chains.Cooperative motion in biological microswimmers is crucial for their survival as it facilitates adhesion to surfaces, formation of hierarchical colonies, efficient motion, and enhanced access to nutrients. Here, we confine synthetic, catalytic microswimmers along one-dimensional paths and demonstrate that they too show a variety of cooperative behaviours. We find that their speed increases with the number of swimmers, and that the activity induces a preferred distance between swimmers. Using a minimal model, we ascribe this behavior to an effective activity-induced potential that stems from a competition between chemical and hydrodynamic coupling. These interactions further induce active self-assembly into trains where swimmers move at a well-separated, stable distance with respect to each other, as well as compact chains that can elongate, break-up, become immobilized and remobilized. We identify the crucial role that environment morphology and swimmer directionality play on these highly dynamic chain behaviors. These activity-induced interactions open the door toward exploiting cooperation for increasing the efficiency of microswimmer motion, with temporal and spatial control, thereby enabling them to perform intricate tasks inside complex environments.
- Published
- 2022
30. Universal motion of mirror-symmetric microparticles in confined Stokes flow
- Author
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Georgiev, Rumen N., Toscano, Sara O., Uspal, William E., Bet, Bram, Samin, Sela, van Roij, René, Eral, Huseyin Burak, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Condensed Matter Theory, Statistical and Computational Physics, Sub Cond-Matter Theory, Stat & Comp Phys, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Condensed Matter Theory, Statistical and Computational Physics, Sub Cond-Matter Theory, Stat & Comp Phys, and Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
Physics ,Multidisciplinary ,Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn) ,microfluidics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Motion (geometry) ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mechanics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,particle-laden flow ,Stokes flow ,Translation (geometry) ,Rotation ,Applied Physical Sciences ,Hele-Shaw flow ,Physical Sciences ,Trajectory ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Particle ,General ,Hele–Shaw flow ,Magnetosphere particle motion - Abstract
Significance Particles of all shapes and sizes flowing through tight spaces are ever present in applications across length scales ranging from blood flow through tissue capillaries to industrial-scale processes. To date, separating these particles relies on methods employing external force fields. Currently underexplored, omnipresent fluid–structure interactions hold the key to shape-based separation independent of external intervention. By leveraging experiments, theory, and simulations, we show how the symmetry of a particle determines its overall trajectory: In particular, mirror-symmetric particles, both strongly and weakly confined, follow a universal path. We propose minimalistic scaling relations to describe how particle shape affects the parameterization of the universal path. These findings could be used to “program” particle trajectories in lab-on-a-chip devices and industrial separation processes., Comprehensive understanding of particle motion in microfluidic devices is essential to unlock additional technologies for shape-based separation and sorting of microparticles like microplastics, cells, and crystal polymorphs. Such particles interact hydrodynamically with confining surfaces, thus altering their trajectories. These hydrodynamic interactions are shape dependent and can be tuned to guide a particle along a specific path. We produce strongly confined particles with various shapes in a shallow microfluidic channel via stop flow lithography. Regardless of their exact shape, particles with a single mirror plane have identical modes of motion: in-plane rotation and cross-stream translation along a bell-shaped path. Each mode has a characteristic time, determined by particle geometry. Furthermore, each particle trajectory can be scaled by its respective characteristic times onto two master curves. We propose minimalistic relations linking these timescales to particle shape. Together these master curves yield a trajectory universal to particles with a single mirror plane.
- Published
- 2020
31. Scattering from colloidal cubic silica shells: Part II, static structure factors and osmotic equation of state
- Author
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Dekker, F., Kuipers, B. W.M., González García, García, Tuinier, R., Philipse, A. P., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, ICMS Core, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
Equation of state ,Materials science ,Static structure factor ,Thermodynamics ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Measure (mathematics) ,Colloidal cubic shells ,Coatings and Films ,Biomaterials ,Colloid ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Electronic ,Static light scattering ,Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Superballs ,Scattering ,fungi ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Surfaces ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Compressibility ,Cube ,0210 nano-technology ,Structure factor ,Osmotic equation of state - Abstract
Hypothesis The shape of colloidal particles affects the structure of colloidal dispersions. The effect of the cube shape on the thermodynamics of colloidal cube dispersions has not yet been studied experimentally. Static light scattering measurements on colloidal cubic silica shells at finite concentrations allows us to measure the structure factor of colloidal cube fluids and to test theoretical predictions for the equation of state of hard convex superballs. Experiments Hollow silica nanocubes of varying concentrations in N,N,-dimethylformamide were studied with static light scattering. The structure factor was extracted from the scattering curves using experimental form factors. From this experimental structure factor, the specific density of the particles, and the osmotic compressibility were obtained. This osmotic compressibility was then compared to a theoretical equation of state of hard superballs. Findings The first experimental structure factors of a stable cube fluid are presented. The osmotic compressibility of the cube fluid can be described by the equation of state of a hard superball fluid, showing that silica cubes in N,N,-dimethylformamide with LiCl effectively interact as hard particles.
- Published
- 2020
32. Emulsion Destabilization by Squeeze Flow
- Author
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Dekker, Riande I., Deblais, Antoine, Velikov, Krassimir P., Veenstra, Peter, Colin, Annie, Kellay, Hamid, Kegel, Willem K., Bonn, Daniel, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Soft Matter (WZI, IoP, FNWI), IoP (FNWI), Laboratoire Ondes et Matière d'Aquitaine (LOMA), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Sub Soft Condensed Matter
- Subjects
Materials science ,Flow (psychology) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Materials Science(all) ,Oil phase ,Electrochemistry ,[CHIM]Chemical Sciences ,General Materials Science ,Compression (geology) ,Composite material ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Spectroscopy ,[PHYS]Physics [physics] ,Coalescence (physics) ,Aqueous two-phase system ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Electrostatics ,0104 chemical sciences ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Oil droplet ,Emulsion ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
There is a large debate on the destabilization mechanism of emulsions. We present a simple technique using mechanical compression to destabilize oil-in-water emulsions. Upon compression of the emulsion, the continuous aqueous phase is squeezed out, while the dispersed oil phase progressively deforms from circular to honeycomb-like shapes. The films that separate the oil droplets are observed to thin and break at a critical oil/water ratio, leading to coalescence events. Electrostatic interactions and local droplet rearrangements do not determine film rupture. Instead, the destabilization occurs like an avalanche propagating through the system, starting at areas where the film thickness is smallest., 16 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2020
33. Controlling Surfactant Adsorption on Highly Charged Nanoparticles to Stabilize Bijels
- Author
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Boakye-Ansah, Stephen, Khan, Mohd Azeem, Haase, Martin F., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
Materials science ,Surfactants ,Nanoparticle ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Coatings and Films ,Surface tension ,Adsorption ,Energy(all) ,Dynamic light scattering ,Electronic ,Zeta potential ,Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Surface charge ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Fluid transport ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Surfaces ,General Energy ,Chemical engineering ,Mixtures ,Nanoparticles ,Particle ,Particulate matter ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Bicontinuous particle-stabilized emulsions (bijels) are networks of interpenetrating oil/water channels with applications in catalysis, tissue engineering, and energy storage. Bijels can be generated by arresting solvent transfer induced phase separation (STrIPS) via interfacial jamming of nanoparticles. However, until now, STrIPS bijels have only been formed with silica nanoparticles of low surface charge densities, limiting their potential applications in catalysis and fluid transport. Here, we show how strongly charged silica nanoparticles can stabilize bijels. To this end, we carry out a systematic study employing dynamic light scattering, zeta potential, acid/base titrations, turbidimetry, surface tension, and confocal microscopy. We find that moderating the adsorption of oppositely charged surfactants on the particles is crucial to facilitate particle dispersibility in the bijel casting mixture and bijel stabilization. Our results potentially introduce a general understanding for bijel fabrication with different inorganic nanoparticle materials of variable charge density.
- Published
- 2020
34. Directional-dependent pockets drive columnar–columnar coexistence
- Author
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González García, Álvaro, Tuinier, Remco, De With, Gijsbertus, Cuetos, Alejandro, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Materials and Interface Chemistry, ICMS Core, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
Materials science ,Chemistry(all) ,Binary number ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Stability (probability) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Chemical physics ,SPHERES ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The rational design of materials requires a fundamental understanding of the mechanisms driving their self-assembly. This may be particularly challenging in highly dense and shape-asymmetric systems. Here we show how the addition of tiny non-adsorbing spheres (depletants) to a dense system of hard disc-like particles (discotics) leads to coexistence between two distinct, highly dense (liquid)-crystalline columnar phases. This coexistence emerges due to the directional-dependent free-volume pockets for depletants. Theoretical results are confirmed by simulations explicitly accounting for the binary mixture of interest. We define the stability limits of this columnar-columnar coexistence and quantify the directional-dependent depletant partitioning. This journal is
- Published
- 2020
35. Block copolymer hierarchical structures from the interplay of multiple assembly pathways
- Author
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Ianiro, Alessandro, Chi, Meng, Hendrix, Marco M. R. M., Koc, Au Vala, Eren, E. Deniz, Sztucki, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., de With, Gijsbertus, Esteves, A. Catarina C., Tuinier, Remco, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Self-Organizing Soft Matter, Materials and Interface Chemistry, and ICMS Core
- Subjects
Copolymer composition ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Chemical engineering ,law ,Organic Chemistry ,Copolymer ,Hierarchical organization ,Bioengineering ,Crystallization ,Biochemistry ,law.invention - Abstract
Structurally complex hierarchical block copolymer assemblies can be formed in solution via the interplay of multiple assembly pathways. Crystallizable block copolymers can undergo self-assembly, crystallization or phase separation in solution. By selecting appropriate solvency conditions (solvent and temperature) it is possible to induce an interplay between these processes resulting in a complex association behavior. This leads to the formation of assemblies with up to four levels of hierarchical organization. Furthermore, varying the copolymer composition enables to tune the formation mechanism and the morphology of the aggregates.
- Published
- 2020
36. Shape Matters in Magnetic-Field-Assisted Assembly of Prolate Colloids
- Author
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Pal, Antara, Filippo, Carlo Andrea De, Ito, Thiago, Kamal, Md Arif, Petukhov, Andrei V., Michele, Cristiano De, Schurtenberger, Peter, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical Chemistry
- Subjects
small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) ,General Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,particle shape-analysis ,Physics and Astronomy(all) ,directed self-assembly ,liquid crystals ,magnetic anisotropic colloids ,Monte Carlo (MC) simulation ,Materials Science(all) ,General Materials Science ,Engineering(all) - Abstract
An anisotropic colloidal shape in combination with an externally tunable interaction potential results in a plethora of self-assembled structures with potential applications toward the fabrication of smart materials. Here we present our investigation on the influence of an external magnetic field on the self-assembly of hematite-silica core-shell prolate colloids for two aspect ratios ρ = 2.9 and 3.69. Our study shows a rather counterintuitive but interesting phenomenon, where prolate colloids self-assemble into oblate liquid crystalline (LC) phases. With increasing concentration, particles with smaller ρ reveal a sequence of LC phases involving para-nematic, nematic, smectic, and oriented glass phases. The occurrence of a smectic phase for colloidal ellipsoids has been neither predicted nor reported before. Quantitative shape analysis of the particles together with extensive computer simulations indicate that in addition to ρ, a subtle deviation from the ideal ellipsoidal shape dictates the formation of this unusual sequence of field-induced structures. Particles with ρ = 2.9 exhibit a hybrid shape containing features from both spherocylinders and ellipsoids, which make their self-assembly behavior richer than that observed for either of the “pure” shapes. The shape of the particles with higher ρ matches closely with the ideal ellipsoids, as a result their phase behavior follows the one expected for a “pure” ellipsoidal shape. Using anisotropic building blocks and external fields, our study demonstrates the ramifications of the subtle changes in the particle shape on the field-directed self-assembled structures with externally tunable properties.
- Published
- 2022
37. Design and characterization of Ca-Fe(III) pyrophosphate salts with tunable pH-dependent solubility for dual-fortification of foods
- Author
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Moslehi, Neshat, Bijlsma, Judith, de Bruijn, Wouter J.C., Velikov, Krassimir P., Vincken, Jean Paul, Kegel, Willem K., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, and Soft Matter (WZI, IoP, FNWI)
- Subjects
Nutrition and Dietetics ,Ferric pyrophosphate ,Food Chemistry ,Dissolution behavior ,Levensmiddelenchemie ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Food fortification ,Mixed mineral salt ,Iron supplementation ,Food Science ,VLAG ,Calcium-iron (III) pyrophosphate salt - Abstract
Food-fortification using poorly water-soluble mineral-containing compounds is a common approach to deliver iron. However, it comes with the challenge of ensuring iron bio-accessibility and limiting iron-phenolic interactions that can change organoleptic properties. Mixed Ca-Fe(III) pyrophosphate salts with the general formula Ca2(1-x)Fe4x(P2O7)(1+2x) were designed as a system for simultaneous delivery of iron and calcium. The salts were synthesized via a co-precipitation method and characterized by TEM-EDX, XRD, and FT-IR. All mixed salts with 0.14 ≤ x ≤ 0.35 yielded homogenous amorphous particles. The iron dissolution from these mixed salts showed a fourfold increase at gastric pH compared to Fe(III) pyrophosphate. In the food-relevant pH range, the salts with x ≤ 0.15 showed up to an eight-fold decrease in iron solubility. Despite this, reactivity of the mixed salts in tea was similar to that of FePP. Our results indicate that these mixed salts are potential dual-fortificants with tunable iron content and solubility.
- Published
- 2022
38. Angular X-ray cross-correlation analysis applied to the scattering data in 3D reciprocal space from a single crystal
- Author
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Lapkin, Dmitry, Shabalin, Anatoly, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Kurta, Ruslan, Sprung, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., Vartanyants, Ivan A., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
Chemistry(all) ,Materials Science(all) ,X-ray scattering ,X-ray cross-correlation analysis ,crystalline defects ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Biochemistry ,structure determination - Abstract
An application of angular X-ray cross-correlation analysis (AXCCA) to the scattered intensity distribution measured in 3D reciprocal space from a single-crystalline sample is proposed in this work. Contrary to the conventional application of AXCCA, when averaging over many 2D diffraction patterns collected from different randomly oriented samples is required, the proposed approach provides an insight into the structure of a single specimen. This is particularly useful in studies of defect-rich samples that are unlikely to have the same structure. The application of the method is shown on an example of a qualitative structure determination of a colloidal crystal from simulated as well as experimentally measured 3D scattered intensity distributions.
- Published
- 2022
39. Nanostructured, Fluid-Bicontinuous Gels for Continuous-Flow Liquid-Liquid Extraction
- Author
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Khan, Mohd, Sprockel, Alessio, MacMillan, Katherine, Alting, Matthijs, Kharal, Shankar P., Haase, Martin, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, and Physical and Colloid Chemistry
- Subjects
catalysis ,Materials Science(all) ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,extraction ,bijels ,nanoparticles ,General Materials Science ,electroosmosis - Abstract
Fluid-bicontinuous gels are unique materials that allow two distinct fluids to interact through a percolating, rigid scaffold. Current restrictions for their use are the large fluid-channel sizes (>5 µm), limiting the fluid–fluid interaction surface-area, and the inability to flow liquids through the channels. In this work a scalable synthesis route of nanoparticle stabilized fluid-bicontinuous gels with channels sizes below 500 nm and specific surface areas of 2 m2 cm−3 is introduced. Moreover, it is demonstrated that liquids can be pumped through the fluid-bicontinuous gels via electroosmosis. The fast liquid flow in the fluid-bicontinuous gel facilitates their use for molecular separations in continuous-flow liquid–liquid extraction. Together with the high surface areas, liquid flow through fluid-bicontinuous gels enhances their potential as highly permeable porous materials with possible uses as microreaction media, fuel-cell components, and separation membranes.
- Published
- 2022
40. Tuning the size of all-HPMA polymeric micelles fabricated by solvent extraction
- Author
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Afd Pharmaceutics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Pharmaceutics, Wang, Yan, Thies-Weesie, Dominique M E, Bosman, Esmeralda D C, van Steenbergen, Mies J, van den Dikkenberg, Joep, Shi, Yang, Lammers, Twan, van Nostrum, Cornelus F, Hennink, Wim E, Afd Pharmaceutics, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Pharmaceutics, Wang, Yan, Thies-Weesie, Dominique M E, Bosman, Esmeralda D C, van Steenbergen, Mies J, van den Dikkenberg, Joep, Shi, Yang, Lammers, Twan, van Nostrum, Cornelus F, and Hennink, Wim E
- Published
- 2022
41. Centrifugal assembly of helical bijel fibers for pH responsive composite hydrogels
- Author
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Kharal, Shankar P., Haase, Martin F., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Kharal, Shankar P., and Haase, Martin F.
- Published
- 2022
42. Angular X-ray cross-correlation analysis applied to the scattering data in 3D reciprocal space from a single crystal
- Author
-
Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Lapkin, Dmitry, Shabalin, Anatoly, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Kurta, Ruslan, Sprung, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., Vartanyants, Ivan A., Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Lapkin, Dmitry, Shabalin, Anatoly, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Kurta, Ruslan, Sprung, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., and Vartanyants, Ivan A.
- Published
- 2022
43. Three-electrode cell calorimeter for electrical double layer capacitors
- Author
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Instrumentatie GIM, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Vos, Joren, Rodenburg, Henrik, Inder Maur, Danny, Bakker, Ties, Siekman, Henkjan, Erne, Ben, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Instrumentatie GIM, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Materials Chemistry and Catalysis, Vos, Joren, Rodenburg, Henrik, Inder Maur, Danny, Bakker, Ties, Siekman, Henkjan, and Erne, Ben
- Published
- 2022
44. Ethyl cellulose nanoparticles as stabilizers for Pickering emulsions
- Author
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Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Kibbelaar, Heleen V.M., Dekker, Riande I., Morcy, Azeza, Kegel, Willem K., Velikov, Krassimir P., Bonn, Daniel, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Kibbelaar, Heleen V.M., Dekker, Riande I., Morcy, Azeza, Kegel, Willem K., Velikov, Krassimir P., and Bonn, Daniel
- Published
- 2022
45. Characterization of hen phosvitin in aqueous salt solutions: Size, structure, and aggregation
- Author
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Takeuchi, Machi, Mashima, Tsuyoshi, Sztucki, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., Vis, Mark, Friedrich, Heiner, Tuinier, Remco, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Takeuchi, Machi, Mashima, Tsuyoshi, Sztucki, Michael, Petukhov, Andrei V., Vis, Mark, Friedrich, Heiner, and Tuinier, Remco
- Published
- 2022
46. Synthesis and Polyelectrolyte Functionalization of Hollow Fiber Membranes Formed by Solvent Transfer Induced Phase Separation
- Author
-
Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Siegel, Henrik, Sprockel, Alessio J, Schwenger, Matthew S, Steenhoff, Jesse M, Achterhuis, Iske, de Vos, Wiebe M, Haase, Martin F, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Siegel, Henrik, Sprockel, Alessio J, Schwenger, Matthew S, Steenhoff, Jesse M, Achterhuis, Iske, de Vos, Wiebe M, and Haase, Martin F
- Published
- 2022
47. Structural insights into the contactin 1 - neurofascin 155 adhesion complex
- Author
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Sub Structural Biochemistry, Sub Biomol.Mass Spectrometry & Proteom., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Afd Biomol.Mass Spect. and Proteomics, Structural Biochemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics, Chataigner, Lucas M P, Gogou, Christos, den Boer, Maurits A, Frias, Cátia P, Thies-Weesie, Dominique M E, Granneman, Joke C M, Heck, Albert J R, Meijer, Dimphna H, Janssen, Bert J C, Sub Structural Biochemistry, Sub Biomol.Mass Spectrometry & Proteom., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Afd Biomol.Mass Spect. and Proteomics, Structural Biochemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics, Chataigner, Lucas M P, Gogou, Christos, den Boer, Maurits A, Frias, Cátia P, Thies-Weesie, Dominique M E, Granneman, Joke C M, Heck, Albert J R, Meijer, Dimphna H, and Janssen, Bert J C
- Published
- 2022
48. Design and characterization of Ca-Fe(III) pyrophosphate salts with tunable pH-dependent solubility for dual-fortification of foods
- Author
-
Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Moslehi, Neshat, Bijlsma, Judith, de Bruijn, Wouter J.C., Velikov, Krassimir P., Vincken, Jean Paul, Kegel, Willem K., Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Moslehi, Neshat, Bijlsma, Judith, de Bruijn, Wouter J.C., Velikov, Krassimir P., Vincken, Jean Paul, and Kegel, Willem K.
- Published
- 2022
49. Self-assembly of colloidal superballs under spherical confinement of a drying droplet
- Author
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Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Schyck, Sarah, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Baldauf, Lucia, Schall, Peter, Petukhov, Andrei V., Rossi, Laura, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Schyck, Sarah, Meijer, Janne-Mieke, Baldauf, Lucia, Schall, Peter, Petukhov, Andrei V., and Rossi, Laura
- Published
- 2022
50. Extending the dynamic temperature range of Boltzmann thermometers
- Author
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Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, van Swieten, Thomas Pieter, Steenhoff, Jesse Merlijn, Vlasblom, Auke, de Berg, Ravi, Mattern, Sam Pieter, Rabouw, Freddy Teunis, Suta, Markus, Meijerink, Andries, Sub Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Sub Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Sub Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, Sub Soft Condensed Matter, Condensed Matter and Interfaces, Physical and Colloid Chemistry, Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysics, Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis, van Swieten, Thomas Pieter, Steenhoff, Jesse Merlijn, Vlasblom, Auke, de Berg, Ravi, Mattern, Sam Pieter, Rabouw, Freddy Teunis, Suta, Markus, and Meijerink, Andries
- Published
- 2022
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