"MightyLev," a new multi-emitter ultrasonic acoustic levitation device capable of extremely stable levitation of materials of density up to at least 11.3 g cm-3, is described. The exceptional stability of medium- to high-density samples levitated in MightyLev makes the device highly suitable for chemical and structural analysis using micro-focused spectroscopic and x-ray scattering techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure of aerodynamically levitated liquid [Formula: see text] was measured by neutron diffraction with isotope substitution (NDIS). Classical and molecular dynamics simulations were performed and their results were found to be in close agreement with each other and the NDIS data. The results reveal that molten [Formula: see text] may be considered as an ionic liquid without any preference for particular short-range structural motifs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcoustic standing wave devices offer excellent potential applications in biological sciences for drug delivery, cell manipulation and tissue engineering. However, concerns have been raised about possible destructive effects on cells due to the applied acoustic field, in addition to other produced secondary factors. Here, we report a systematic study employing a 1D resonant acoustic trapping device to evaluate the cell viability and cell metabolism for a healthy cell line (Human Dermal Fibroblasts, HDF) and a cervical cancer cell line (HeLa), as a function of time and voltages applied (4-10 V) under temperature-controlled conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcoustic standing waves offer an excellent opportunity to trap and spatially manipulate colloidal objects. This noncontact technique is used for the in situ formation and patterning in aqueous solution of 1D or 2D arrays of pH-responsive coacervate microdroplets comprising poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride and the dipeptide N-fluorenyl-9-methoxy-carbonyl-D-alanine-D-alanine. Decreasing the pH of the preformed droplet arrays results in dipeptide nanofilament self-assembly and subsequent formation of a micropatterned supramolecular hydrogel that can be removed as a self-supporting monolith.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure and thermal characteristics of aerodynamically levitated samples of yttria-alumina in the liquid, supercooled liquid and solid phases were explored in an extensive series of high energy x-ray diffraction, small angle neutron scattering, and pyrometric cooling measurements. Particular focus was placed on the compound (Y2O3)(x)(Al2O3)(1-x) with x = 0.2 for which a liquid-liquid phase transition at a temperature of 1788 K has recently been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe change in structure of glassy GeS(2) with pressure increasing to [Formula: see text] at ambient temperature was explored by using in situ neutron and x-ray diffraction. Under ambient conditions, the glass structure is made from a mixture of corner- and edge-sharing Ge(S(1/2))(4) tetrahedra where 47(5)% of the Ge atoms are involved in edge-sharing configurations. The network formed by these tetrahedra orders on an intermediate range as manifested by the appearance of a pronounced first sharp diffraction peak in the measured total structure factors at a scattering vector k = 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA detailed study of glass formation from aerodynamically levitated liquids in the (Y(2)O(3))(x)(Al(2)O(3))(1-x) system for the composition range 0.21≤x≤0.41 was undertaken by using pyrometric, optical imaging and x-ray diffraction methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe full set of partial structure factors for glassy germania, or GeO, were accurately measured by using the method of isotopic substitution in neutron diffraction in order to elucidate the nature of the pair correlations for this archetypal strong glass former. The results show that the basic tetrahedral Ge(O) building blocks share corners with a mean inter-tetrahedral Ge-Ô-Ge bond angle of 132(2)°. The topological and chemical ordering in the resultant network displays two characteristic length scales at distances greater than the nearest neighbour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relation between the fragility of glass-forming systems, a parameter which describes many of their key physical characteristics, and atomic scale structure is investigated by using neutron diffraction to measure the topological and chemical ordering for germania, or GeO(2), which is an archetypal strong glass former. We find that the ordering for this and other tetrahedral network-forming glasses at distances greater than the nearest neighbor can be rationalized in terms of an interplay between the relative importance of two length scales. One of these is associated with an intermediate range, the other with an extended range and, with increasing glass fragility, it is the extended range ordering which dominates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF