Colloidal solids (COLIS) is a state-of-the-art light scattering setup developed for experiments onboard the International Space Station (ISS). COLIS allows for probing the structure and dynamics of soft matter systems on a wide range of length scales, from a few nm to tens of microns, and on time scales from 100 ns to tens of hours. In addition to conventional static and dynamic light scattering, COLIS includes depolarized dynamic light scattering, a small-angle camera, photon correlation imaging, and optical manipulation of thermosensitive samples through an auxiliary near-infrared laser beam, thereby providing a unique platform for probing soft matter systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Brownian dynamics of a colloidal particle is consistently modified by the presence in the solvent of other particles of comparable size, whose effects on the particle diffusion coefficient cannot be attributed to a change of the effective solvent viscosity. So far, despite their impact on subjects ranging from microrheology to phoretic transport in crowded environments, a detailed experimental survey of these effects is still lacking. By exploiting the peculiar properties of fluorinated colloidal particle, we have performed an extensive dynamic light scattering (DLS) investigation of short-time self-diffusion in binary colloidal mixtures, focusing on systems where one of the two species (the "tracer" particles) is very diluted compared to the other one (the "host" particles).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelf-assembling peptides (SAPs) have been increasingly studied as hydrogel-former gelators because they can create biocompatible environments. A common strategy to trigger gelation, is to use a pH variation, but most methods result in a change in pH that is too rapid, leading to gels with hardly reproducible properties. Here, we use the urea-urease reaction to tune gel properties, by a slow and uniform pH increase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe weak absorption of a laser beam generates in a fluid an inhomogeneous refractive index profile acting as a negative lens. This self-effect on beam propagation, known as Thermal Lensing (TL), is extensively exploited in sensitive spectroscopic techniques, and in several all-optical methods for the assessment of thermo-optical properties of simple and complex fluids. Using the Lorentz-Lorenz equation, we show that the TL signal is directly proportional to the sample thermal expansivity α, a feature allowing minute density changes to be detected with high sensitivity in a tiny sample volume, using a simple optical scheme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the rheo-mechanical properties of Mebiol Gel®, a thermosensitive gel-forming polymer extensively used as a medium for cellular culture, using passive microrheology made either by standard dynamic light scattering or by photon correlation imaging. In the dilute limit, Mebiol displays a Newtonian behavior with an effective viscosity that decreases with temperature, consistent with a peculiar aggregation mechanism characterized by an increase of the molecular weight with a simultaneous reduction of the aggregate size. By increasing concentration and approaching gelation, both the storage and loss moduli show a nonmonotonic dependence with temperature, with a pronounced maximum around T ≃ 28-30 °C, the value above which, in the dilute limit, the individual Mebiol chains are fully compacted.
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