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1.
ACS Appl Opt Mater ; 2(6): 1000-1009, 2024 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38962568

ABSTRACT

Although concrete and cement-based materials are the most engineered materials employed by mankind, their potential for use in daytime radiative cooling applications has yet to be fully explored. Due to its complex structure, which is composed of multiple phases and textural details, fine-tuning of concrete is impossible without first analyzing its most important ingredients. Here, the radiative cooling properties of Portlandite (Ca(OH)2) and Tobermorite (Ca5Si6O16(OH)2·4H2O) are studied due to their crucial relevance in cement and concrete science and technology. Our findings demonstrate that, in contrast to concrete (which is a strong infrared emitter but a poor sun reflector), both Portlandite and Tobermorite exhibit good radiative cooling capabilities. These results provide solid evidence that, with the correct optimization of composition and porosity, concrete can be transformed into a material suitable for daytime radiative cooling.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(11): e2213481120, 2023 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36881619

ABSTRACT

Endowing materials with the ability to sense, adapt, and respond to stimuli holds the key to a progress leap in autonomous systems. In spite of the growing success of macroscopic soft robotic devices, transferring these concepts to the microscale presents several challenges connected to the lack of suitable fabrication and design techniques and of internal response schemes that connect the materials' properties to the function of the active units. Here, we realize self-propelling colloidal clusters which possess a finite number of internal states, which define their motility and which are connected by reversible transitions. We produce these units via capillary assembly combining hard polystyrene colloids with two different types of thermoresponsive microgels. The clusters, actuated by spatially uniform AC electric fields, adapt their shape and dielectric properties, and consequently their propulsion, via reversible temperature-induced transitions controlled by light. The different transition temperatures for the two microgels enable three distinct dynamical states corresponding to three illumination intensity levels. The sequential reconfiguration of the microgels affects the velocity and shape of the active trajectories according to a pathway defined by tailoring the clusters' geometry during assembly. The demonstration of these simple systems indicates an exciting route toward building more complex units with broader reconfiguration schemes and multiple responses as a step forward in the pursuit of adaptive autonomous systems at the colloidal scale.

3.
ACS Omega ; 5(30): 18602-18607, 2020 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32775862

ABSTRACT

Using dielectric spectroscopy experiments performed at multiple temperatures and frequency ranges, we demonstrate how the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel changes the dynamic properties of water in a breast cancer cell line (MCF-7). From the measured data, we present evidence that treatment with paclitaxel leads to a slight increase in activation energy in a relaxation related to bulk-like water. More importantly, we also observe that paclitaxel changes the constraining imposed by the biological interfaces on hydration water, whose single-particle dynamics becomes slower and with higher activation energy. These variations are only observable after freezing the dynamics from other cellular components, such as proteins and DNAs, regardless of the state of the cells, that is, treated or not treated or even if the cells are no longer viable. Therefore, changes in water dynamics could be detected prior to those related to the global dynamics within the cellular environment.

4.
Polymers (Basel) ; 12(3)2020 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32156023

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of n-propanol confined in regular MCM-41 matrix with the pore size Dpore = 40 Å, under various matrix conditioning and sample confining conditions, using broadband dielectric spectroscopy (BDS), is reported. First, various drying procedures with the capacitor filling under air or N2 influence the BDS spectra of the empty MCM-41 and the confined n-PrOH/MCM-41 systems, but have a little effect on the maximum relaxation time of the main process. Finally, various filling factors of n-PrOH medium in the optimally treated MCM-41 system lead to unimodal or bimodal spectra interpreted in terms of the two distinct dynamic phases in the confined states.

5.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 15830, 2018 Oct 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30361491

ABSTRACT

Shortly after mixing cement grains with water, a cementitious fluid paste is formed that immediately transforms into a solid form by a phenomenon known as setting. Setting actually corresponds to the percolation of emergent network structures consisting of dissolving cement grains glued together by nanoscale hydration products, mainly calcium-silicate-hydrates. As happens in many percolation phenomena problems, the theoretical identification of the percolation threshold (i.e. the cement setting) is still challenging, since the length scale where percolation becomes apparent (typically the length of the cement grains, microns) is many times larger than the nanoscale hydrates forming the growing spanning network. Up to now, the long-lasting gap of knowledge on the establishment of a seamless handshake between both scales has been an unsurmountable obstacle for the development of a predictive theory of setting. Herein we present a true multi-scale model which concurrently provides information at the scale of cement grains (microns) and at the scale of the nano-hydrates that emerge during cement hydration. A key feature of the model is the recognition of cement setting as an off-lattice bond percolation process between cement grains. Inasmuch as this is so, the macroscopic probability of forming bonds between cement grains can be statistically analysed in smaller local observation windows containing fewer cement grains, where the nucleation and growth of the nano-hydrates can be explicitly described using a kinetic Monte Carlo Nucleation and Growth model. The most striking result of the model is the finding that only a few links (~12%) between cement grains are needed to reach setting. This directly unveils the importance of explicitly including nano-texture on the description of setting and explains why so low amount of nano-hydrates is needed for forming a spanning network. From the simulations, it becomes evident that this low amount is least affected by processing variables like the water-to-cement ratio and the presence of large quantities of nonreactive fillers. These counter-intuitive predictions were verified by ex-professo experiments that we have carried out to check the validity of our model.

6.
J Chem Phys ; 134(3): 034509, 2011 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21261370

ABSTRACT

The behavior of water dynamics confined in hydrated calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) gel has been investigated using broadband dielectric spectroscopy (BDS; 10(-2)-10(6) Hz) in the low-temperature range (110-250 K). Different water contents in C-S-H gel were explored (from 6 to 15 wt%) where water remains amorphous for all the studied temperatures. Three relaxation processes were found by BDS (labeled 1 to 3 from the fastest to the slowest), two of them reported here for the first time. We show that a strong change in the dielectric relaxation of C-S-H gel occurs with increasing hydration, especially at a hydration level in which a monolayer of water around the basic units of cement materials is predicted by different structural models. Below this hydration level both processes 2 and 3 have an Arrhenius temperature dependence. However, at higher hydration level, a non-Arrhenius behavior temperature dependence for process 3 over the whole accessible temperature range and, a crossover from low-temperature Arrhenius to high-temperature non-Arrhenius behavior for process 2 are observed. Characteristics of these processes will be discussed in this work.


Subject(s)
Calcium Compounds/chemistry , Hydrogen/chemistry , Silicates/chemistry , Dielectric Spectroscopy , Electrons , Gels/chemistry , Temperature , Water/chemistry
7.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 78(2 Pt 1): 021801, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18850857

ABSTRACT

We have investigated the effect of cold drawing on the motion of phenylene rings in bisphenol-A polycarbonate by neutron scattering. The intensity scattered by isotropic and stretched polycarbonate is different, the quasielastic broadening being larger for the isotropic sample. This difference can be well accounted for by considering that preferentially oriented rings in the stretched polymer have their motion sterically hindered. The extent of the effect of stretching on the phenylene-ring motion obtained from this neutron-scattering investigation is in good agreement with that obtained when studying the effect of cold drawing on the gamma relaxation by dielectric spectroscopy.

8.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 75(5 Pt 1): 051801, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17677087

ABSTRACT

We have investigated the dynamics of phenylene rings in the engineering thermoplastic bisphenol-A poly(hydroxyether) -- phenoxy -- below its glass transition temperature by means of neutron scattering techniques. A relatively wide dynamic range has been covered thanks to the combination of two different types of neutron spectrometers, time of flight and backscattering. Partially deuterated samples have been used in order to isolate the phenylene ring dynamics. The resulting neutron scattering signal of phenoxy has been described by a model that considers pi flips and oscillation motions for phenylene rings. The associated time scales are broadly distributed with mean activation energies equal to 0.41 and 0.21eV , respectively. Finally, a comparative study with the literature shows that the dielectric and mechanical gamma relaxation in phenoxy exhibit good correlation with the characteristic times of the aliphatic chain published elsewhere and with the characteristic times observed for the motion of phenylene rings by neutron scattering. These findings are discussed in a more general framework that considers, in addition, previous results on other polymers, which also contain the bisphenol-A unit.

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