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1.
Biomacromolecules ; 25(7): 3976-3989, 2024 Jul 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38829254

RESUMO

We study the efficiency of several asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) techniques to investigate self-associating wheat gluten proteins. We compare the use of a denaturing buffer including sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and a mild chaotropic solvent, water/ethanol, as the eluent, on a model gluten sample. Through a thorough analysis of the data obtained from coupled light scattering detectors and with the identification of molecular composition of the eluted protein, we evidence coelution events in several conditions. We show that the focus step used in conventional AF4 with the SDS buffer leads to the formation of aggregates that coelute with monomeric proteins. By contrast, a frit-inlet device enables the fractionation of individual wheat proteins in the SDS buffer. Interestingly conventional AF4, using water/ethanol as eluent, is an effective method for fractionating gluten proteins and their complex dynamic assemblies, which involve weak forces and are composed of both monomeric and polymeric proteins.


Assuntos
Fracionamento por Campo e Fluxo , Glutens , Dodecilsulfato de Sódio , Triticum , Fracionamento por Campo e Fluxo/métodos , Glutens/química , Triticum/química , Dodecilsulfato de Sódio/química , Proteínas de Plantas/química
2.
Soft Matter ; 2024 Jul 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39028363

RESUMO

Soft amorphous materials are viscoelastic solids ubiquitously found around us, from clays and cementitious pastes to emulsions and physical gels encountered in food or biomedical engineering. Under an external deformation, these materials undergo a noteworthy transition from a solid to a liquid state that reshapes the material microstructure. This yielding transition was the main theme of a workshop held from January 9 to 13, 2023 at the Lorentz Center in Leiden. The manuscript presented here offers a critical perspective on the subject, synthesizing insights from the various brainstorming sessions and informal discussions that unfolded during this week of vibrant exchange of ideas. The result of these exchanges takes the form of a series of open questions that represent outstanding experimental, numerical, and theoretical challenges to be tackled in the near future.

3.
Soft Matter ; 19(36): 6968-6977, 2023 Sep 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37665265

RESUMO

The evaporation of drops of colloidal suspensions plays an important role in numerous contexts, such as the production of powdered dairies, the synthesis of functional supraparticles, and virus and bacteria survival in aerosols or drops on surfaces. The presence of colloidal particles in the evaporating drop eventually leads to the formation of a dense shell that may undergo a shape instability. Previous works propose that, for drops evaporating very fast, the instability occurs when the particles form a rigid porous solid, constituted of permanently aggregated particles at random close packing. To date, however, no measurements could directly test this scenario and assess whether it also applies to drops drying at lower evaporation rates, severely limiting our understanding of this phenomenon and the possibility of harnessing it in applications. Here, we combine macroscopic imaging and space- and time-resolved measurements of the microscopic dynamics of colloidal nanoparticles in drying drops sitting on a hydrophobic surface, measuring the evolution of the thickness of the shell and the spatial distribution and mobility of the nanoparticles. We find that, above a threshold evaporation rate, the drop undergoes successively two distinct shape instabilities, invagination and cracking. While permanent aggregation of nanoparticles accompanies the second instability, as hypothesized in previous works on fast-evaporating drops, we show that the first one results from a reversible glass transition of the shell, unreported so far. We rationalize our findings and discuss their implications in the framework of a unified state diagram for the drying of colloidal drops sitting on a hydrophobic surface.

4.
Langmuir ; 37(8): 2714-2727, 2021 03 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33599128

RESUMO

The adsorption of a sunflower protein extract at two air-water and oil-water interfaces is investigated using tensiometry, dilational viscoelasticity, and ellipsometry. For both interfaces, a three step mechanism was evidenced thanks to master curve representations of the data taken at different aging times and protein concentrations. At short times, a diffusion limited adsorption of proteins at interfaces is demonstrated. First, a two-dimensional protein film is formed with a partition of the polypeptide chains in the two phases that depends strongly on the nature of the hydrophobic phase: most of the film is in the aqueous phase at the air-water interface, while it is mostly in the organic phase at the oil-water interface. Then a three-dimensional saturated monolayer of proteins is formed. At short times, adsorption mechanisms are analogous to those found with typical globular proteins, while strong divergences are observed at longer adsorption times. Following the saturation step, a thick layer expands in the aqueous phase and appears associated with the release of large objects in the bulk. The kinetic evolution of this second layer is compatible with a diffusion limited adsorption of the minor population of polymeric complexes with hydrodynamic radius RH ∼ 80 nm, evidenced in equilibrium with hexameric globulins (RH ∼ 6 nm) in solution. These complexes could result from the presence of residual polyphenols in the extract and raise the question of the role of these compounds in the interfacial properties of plant protein extracts.


Assuntos
Helianthus , Água , Adsorção , Propriedades de Superfície , Tensoativos
5.
Soft Matter ; 17(23): 5829-5837, 2021 Jun 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34037061

RESUMO

We investigate freely expanding viscoelastic sheets. The sheets are produced by the impact of drops on a quartz plate covered with a thin layer of liquid nitrogen that suppresses shear viscous dissipation as a result of the cold Leidenfrost effect. The time evolution of the sheet is simultaneously recorded from top and side views using high-speed cameras. The investigated viscoelastic fluids are Maxwell fluids, which are characterized by low elastic moduli, and relaxation times that vary over almost two orders of magnitude, thus giving access to a large spectrum of viscoelastic and elastocapillary effects. For the purposes of comparison, Newtonian fluids, with viscosity varying over three orders of magnitude, are also investigated. In this study, dmax, the maximal expansion of the sheets, and tmax the time to reach this maximal expansion from the time at impact, are measured as a function of the impact velocity. By using a generalized damped harmonic oscillator model, we rationalize the role of capillarity, bulk elasticity and viscous dissipation in the expansion dynamics of all investigated samples. In the model, the spring constant is a combination of the surface tension and the bulk dynamic elastic modulus. The time-varying damping coefficient is associated to biaxial extensional viscous dissipation and is proportional to the dynamic loss modulus. For all samples, we find that the model reproduces accurately the experimental data for dmax and tmax.

6.
Soft Matter ; 17(48): 10935-10945, 2021 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34811560

RESUMO

We use the impact of drops on a small solid target as a tool to investigate the behavior of viscoelastic fluids under extreme deformation rates. We study two classes of transient networks: semidilute solutions of supramolecular polymers and suspensions of spherical oil droplets reversibly linked by polymers. The two types of samples display very similar linear viscoelastic properties, which can be described with a Maxwell fluid model, but contrasting nonlinear properties due to different network structures. Upon impact, the weakly viscoelastic samples exhibit a behavior qualitatively similar to that of Newtonian fluids: a smooth and regular sheet forms, expands, and then retracts. By contrast, for highly viscoelastic fluids, the thickness of the sheet is found to be very irregular, leading to instabilities and eventually to the formation of holes. We find that the rheological properties of the material rule the onset of instabilities. We first provide a simple image analysis of the expanding sheets to determine the onset of instabilities. We then demonstrate that the Deborah number related to the shortest relaxation time associated with the sample structure following a high shear is the relevant parameter that controls the heterogeneities in the thickness of the sheet, eventually leading to the formation of holes. When the sheet tears-up, data suggest by contrast that the opening dynamics depends also on the expansion rate of the sheet.

7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(14): 3587-3592, 2018 04 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29555776

RESUMO

Material failure is ubiquitous, with implications from geology to everyday life and material science. It often involves sudden, unpredictable events, with little or no macroscopically detectable precursors. A deeper understanding of the microscopic mechanisms eventually leading to failure is clearly required, but experiments remain scarce. Here, we show that the microscopic dynamics of a colloidal gel, a model network-forming system, exhibit dramatic changes that precede its macroscopic failure by thousands of seconds. Using an original setup coupling light scattering and rheology, we simultaneously measure the macroscopic deformation and the microscopic dynamics of the gel, while applying a constant shear stress. We show that the network failure is preceded by qualitative and quantitative changes of the dynamics, from reversible particle displacements to a burst of irreversible plastic rearrangements.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(26): 268006, 2020 Dec 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33449706

RESUMO

We investigate the delayed rupture of biopolymer gels under a constant shear load by simultaneous dynamic light scattering and rheology measurements. We unveil the crucial role of normal stresses built up during gelation: All samples that eventually fracture self-weaken during the gelation process, as revealed by a partial relaxation of the normal stress concomitant to a burst of microscopic plastic rearrangements. Upon applying a shear stress, weakened gels exhibit in the creep regime distinctive signatures in their microscopic dynamics, which anticipate macroscopic fracture by up to thousands of seconds. The dynamics in fracturing gels are faster than those of nonfracturing gels and exhibit large spatiotemporal fluctuations. A spatially localized region with significant plasticity eventually nucleates, expands progressively, and finally invades the whole sample, triggering macroscopic failure.


Assuntos
Biopolímeros/química , Géis/química , Reologia/métodos , Espalhamento de Radiação , Resistência ao Cisalhamento , Substâncias Viscoelásticas/química
9.
Soft Matter ; 16(1): 82-93, 2020 Jan 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31720666

RESUMO

The mechanical properties of soft matter are of great importance in countless applications, in addition of being an active field of academic research. Given the relative ease with which soft materials can be deformed, their non-linear behavior is of particular relevance. Large loads eventually result in material failure. In this Perspective article, we discuss recent work aiming at detecting precursors of failure by scrutinizing the microscopic structure and dynamics of soft systems under various conditions of loading. In particular, we show that the microscopic dynamics is a powerful indicator of the ultimate fate of soft materials, capable of unveiling precursors of failure up to thousands of seconds before any macroscopic sign of weakening.

10.
Soft Matter ; 15(30): 6160-6170, 2019 Aug 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31317157

RESUMO

We investigate by time-resolved synchrotron ultra-small X-ray scattering the dynamics of liquid-liquid phase-separation (LLPS) of gluten protein suspensions following a temperature quench. Samples at a fixed concentration (237 mg ml-1) but with different protein compositions are investigated. In our experimental conditions, we show that fluid viscoelastic samples depleted in polymeric glutenin phase-separate following a spinodal decomposition process. We quantitatively probe the late stage coarsening that results from a competition between thermodynamics that speeds up the coarsening rate as the quench depth increases and transport that slows down the rate. For even deeper quenches, the even higher viscoelasticity of the continuous phase leads to a "quasi" arrested phase separation. Anomalous phase-separation dynamics is by contrast measured for a gel sample rich in glutenin, due to elastic constraints. This work illustrates the role of viscoelasticity in the dynamics of LLPS in protein dispersions.


Assuntos
Fracionamento Químico/métodos , Glutens/isolamento & purificação , Viscosidade , Glutens/química , Espalhamento de Radiação , Síncrotrons , Temperatura
11.
Langmuir ; 33(14): 3458-3467, 2017 04 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28319400

RESUMO

A single-drop experiment based on the collision of one drop of liquid on a small solid target is used to produce liquid sheets that are visualized with a fast camera. Upon impact, the drop flattens into a sheet that is bounded by a thicker rim and radially expanding in air. Emulsion-based liquid sheets are destabilized through the nucleation of holes that perforate the sheet during its expansion. The holes grow until they merge together and form a web of ligaments, which are then destabilized into drops. We propose the perforation mechanism as a sequence of two necessary steps. The emulsion oil droplets first enter the air/water interface, and then spread at the interface. We show that the formulation of the emulsion is a critical parameter to control the perforation as the addition of salt or amphiphilic copolymers can trigger or completely inhibit the perforation mechanism. We demonstrate that the entering of the droplets at the air/water interface is the limiting step of the mechanism. Thin-film forces such as electrostatic or steric repulsion forces stabilize the thin film formed between the interface and the approaching oil droplets, thus preventing the entering of droplets at the interface and in turn inhibiting the perforation process. We theoretically rationalize the successive steps in the approach and entering of an oil droplet at the film interface and the role of salt and amphiphilic polymer in the different steps.

12.
Nat Mater ; 14(5): 505-11, 2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25774954

RESUMO

Visible-light-responsive photocatalysts can directly harvest energy from solar light, offering a desirable way to solve energy and environment issues. Here, we show that one-dimensional poly(diphenylbutadiyne) nanostructures synthesized by photopolymerization using a soft templating approach have high photocatalytic activity under visible light without the assistance of sacrificial reagents or precious metal co-catalysts. These polymer nanostructures are very stable even after repeated cycling. Transmission electron microscopy and nanoscale infrared characterizations reveal that the morphology and structure of the polymer nanostructures remain unchanged after many photocatalytic cycles. These stable and cheap polymer nanofibres are easy to process and can be reused without appreciable loss of activity. Our findings may help the development of semiconducting-based polymers for applications in self-cleaning surfaces, hydrogen generation and photovoltaics.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(19): 198302, 2015 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26588421

RESUMO

We study the destabilization mechanism of thin liquid sheets expanding in air and show that dilute oil-in-water emulsion-based sheets disintegrate through the nucleation and growth of holes that perforate the sheet. The velocity and thickness fields of the sheet outside the holes are not perturbed by holes, and hole opening follows the Taylor-Culick law. We find that a prehole, which widens and thins out the sheet with time, systematically precedes the hole nucleation. The growth dynamics of the prehole follows the law theoretically predicted for a liquid spreading on another liquid of higher surface tension due to Marangoni stresses. Classical Marangoni spreading experiments quantitatively corroborate our findings.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(7): 078301, 2014 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25170734

RESUMO

We use confocal microscopy and time-resolved light scattering to investigate plasticity in a colloidal polycrystal, following the evolution of the network of grain boundaries as the sample is submitted to thousands of shear deformation cycles. The grain boundary motion is found to be ballistic, with a velocity distribution function exhibiting nontrivial power law tails. The shear-induced dynamics initially slow down, similarly to the aging of the spontaneous dynamics in glassy materials, but eventually reach a steady state. Surprisingly, the crossover time between the initial aging regime and the steady state decreases with increasing probed length scale, hinting at a hierarchical organization of the grain boundary dynamics.

15.
ACS Macro Lett ; 13(7): 826-831, 2024 Jul 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38874451

RESUMO

We study model near-critical polymer gelling systems made of gluten protein dispersions stabilized at different distances from the gel point. We impose different shear rates and follow the time evolution of the stress. For sufficiently large shear rates, an intermediate stress overshoot is measured before reaching the steady state. We evidence self-similarity of the stress overshoot as a function of the applied shear rate for samples with various distances from the gel point, which is related to the elastic energy stored by the samples, as for dense systems close to the jamming transition. In concordance with the findings for glassy and jammed systems, we also measure that the stress after flow cessation decreases as a power law with time, with a characteristic relaxation time that depends on the shear rate previously imposed. These features revealed in nonlinear rheology could be the signature of a mesoscopic dynamics, which would depend on the extent of gelation.

16.
Phys Rev E ; 109(6-1): 064613, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39021030

RESUMO

We present a dynamic light scattering setup to probe, with time and space resolution, the microscopic dynamics of soft matter systems confined within millimeter-sized spherical drops. By using an ad hoc optical layout, we tackle the challenges raised by refraction effects due to the unconventional shape of the samples. We first validate the setup by investigating the dynamics of a suspension of Brownian particles. The dynamics measured at different positions in the drop, and hence different scattering angles, are found to be in excellent agreement with those obtained for the same sample in a conventional light scattering setup. We then demonstrate the setup capabilities by investigating a bead made of a polymer hydrogel undergoing swelling. The gel microscopic dynamics exhibit a space dependence that strongly varies with time elapsed since the beginning of swelling. Initially, the dynamics in the periphery of the bead are much faster than in the core, indicative of nonuniform swelling. As the swelling proceeds, the dynamics slow down and become more spatially homogeneous. By comparing the experimental results to numerical and analytical calculations for the dynamics of a homogeneous, purely elastic sphere undergoing swelling, we establish that the mean square displacement of the gel strands deviates from the affine motion inferred from the macroscopic deformation, evolving from fast diffusivelike dynamics at the onset of swelling to slower, yet supradiffusive, rearrangements at later stages.

17.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1818(11): 2839-49, 2012 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22813867

RESUMO

The plasma membrane-cytoskeleton interface is a dynamic structure participating in a variety of cellular events. Moesin and ezrin, proteins from the ezrin/radixin/moesin (ERM) family, provide a direct linkage between the cytoskeleton and the membrane via their interaction with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)). PIP(2) binding is considered as a prerequisite step in ERM activation. The main objective of this work was to compare moesin and ezrin interaction with PIP(2)-containing membranes in terms of affinity and to analyze secondary structure modifications leading eventually to ERM activation. For this purpose, we used two types of biomimetic model membranes, large and giant unilamellar vesicles. The dissociation constant between moesin and PIP(2)-containing large unilamellar vesicles or PIP(2)-containing giant unilamellar vesicles was found to be very similar to that between ezrin and PIP(2)-containing large unilamellar vesicles or PIP(2)-containing giant unilamellar vesicles. In addition, both proteins were found to undergo conformational changes after binding to PIP(2)-containing large unilamellar vesicles. Changes were evidenced by an increased sensitivity to proteolysis, modifications in the fluorescence intensity of the probe attached to the C-terminus and in the proportion of secondary structure elements.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Membranas Artificiais , Proteínas dos Microfilamentos/metabolismo , Fosfatidilinositol 4,5-Difosfato/metabolismo , Biomimética , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/química , Proteínas dos Microfilamentos/química , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Molecular , Fosfatidilinositol 4,5-Difosfato/química , Ligação Proteica , Proteólise , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier
18.
Langmuir ; 28(22): 8562-70, 2012 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22578107

RESUMO

We investigate by scattering techniques the structure of water-based soft composite materials comprising a crystal made of Pluronic block-copolymer micelles arranged in a face-centered cubic lattice and a small amount (at most 2% by volume) of silica nanoparticles, of size comparable to that of the micelles. The copolymer is thermosensitive: it is hydrophilic and fully dissolved in water at low temperature (T ~ 0 °C), and self-assembles into micelles at room temperature, where the block-copolymer is amphiphilic. We use contrast matching small-angle neuron scattering experiments to independently probe the structure of the nanoparticles and that of the polymer. We find that the nanoparticles do not perturb the crystalline order. In addition, a structure peak is measured for the silica nanoparticles dispersed in the polycrystalline samples. This implies that the samples are spatially heterogeneous and comprise, without macroscopic phase separation, silica-poor and silica-rich regions. We show that the nanoparticle concentration in the silica-rich regions is about 10-fold the average concentration. These regions are grain boundaries between crystallites, where nanoparticles concentrate, as shown by static light scattering and by light microscopy imaging of the samples. We show that the temperature rate at which the sample is prepared strongly influence the segregation of the nanoparticles in the grain-boundaries.

19.
Phys Rev Lett ; 107(14): 148302, 2011 Sep 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22107240

RESUMO

We study the nonlinear rheology of a novel class of transient networks, made of surfactant micelles of tunable morphology reversibly linked by block copolymers. We couple rheology and time-resolved structural measurements, using synchrotron radiation, to characterize the highly nonlinear viscoelastic regime. We propose the fluctuations of the degree of alignment of the micelles under shear as a probe to identify a fracture process. We show a clear signature of a brittle-to-ductile transition in transient gels, as the morphology of the micelles varies, and provide a parallel between the fracture of solids and the fracture under shear of viscoelastic fluids.

20.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 33(14)2021 02 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33494081

RESUMO

We investigate the structure of gluten polymer-like gels in a binary mixture of water/ethanol, 50/50 v/v, a good solvent for gluten proteins. Gluten comprises two main families of proteins, monomeric gliadins and polymer glutenins. In the semi-dilute regime, scattering experiments highlight two classes of behavior, akin to standard polymer solution and polymer gel, depending on the protein composition. We demonstrate that these two classes are encoded in the structural features of the proteins in very dilute solution, and are correlated with the presence of proteins assemblies of typical size tens of nanometers. The assemblies only exist when the protein mixture is sufficiently enriched in glutenins. They are found directly associated to the presence in the gel of domains enriched in non-exchangeable H-bonds and of size comparable to that of the protein assemblies. The domains are probed in neutron scattering experiments thanks to their unique contrast. We show that the sample visco-elasticity is also directly correlated to the quantity of domains enriched in H-bonds, showing the key role of H-bonds in ruling the visco-elasticity of polymer gluten gels.


Assuntos
Glutens , Polímeros , Géis/química , Gliadina/química , Glutens/química , Polímeros/química , Proteínas , Viscosidade
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