Liquid crystal-based actuators are receiving increased attention for their applications in wearables and biomedical or surgical devices, with selective actuation of individual parts/fingers still being in its infancy. This work presents the design and realization of two gripper devices with four individually addressable liquid-crystal network (LCN) actuators thermally driven via printed graphene-based heating elements. The resistive heat causes the all-organic actuator to bend due to anisotropic volume expansions of the splay-aligned sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater-borne coatings were prepared from poly(methyl methacrylate--butyl acrylate) latexes using different methacrylic acid containing macromonomers as stabilizers, and their physical properties were determined. The amphiphilic methacrylic acid macromonomers containing methyl, butyl, or lauryl methacrylate as hydrophobic comonomers were synthesized via catalytic chain transfer polymerization to give stabilizers with varying architecture, composition, and molar mass. A range of latexes of virtually the same composition was prepared by keeping the content of methacrylic acid groups during the emulsion polymerization constant and by only varying the microstructure of the macromonomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiatoms are unicellular photosynthetic algae that produce a silica exoskeleton (frustule) which exposes a highly ordered nano to micro scale morphology. In recent years there has been a growing interest in modifying diatom frustules for technological applications. This is achieved by adding non-essential metals to the growth medium of diatoms which in turn modifies morphology, composition, and resulting properties of the frustule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding and controlling the formation of nanoparticles at the surface of functional oxide supports is critical for tuning activity and stability for catalytic and energy conversion applications. Here, we use a latest generation environmental transmission electron microscope to follow the exsolution of individual nanoparticles at the surface of perovskite oxides, with ultrahigh spatial and temporal resolution. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of the data reveals the atomic scale processes that underpin the formation of the socketed, strain-inducing interface that confers exsolved particles their exceptional stability and reactivity.
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