Collective osmotic shock in ordered materials
Author(s) -
Paul ZavalaRivera,
Keith M. Chan,
Vincent Nguyen,
Easan Sivaniah,
Dinesh Kabra,
Richard H. Friend,
S.K. Nataraj,
Shaheen A. AlMuhtaseb,
Alexander Hexemer,
Mauricio E. Calvo,
Hernán Míguez
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nature materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 14.344
H-Index - 483
eISSN - 1476-4660
pISSN - 1476-1122
DOI - 10.1038/nmat3179
Subject(s) - materials science , shock (circulatory) , osmotic shock , micelle , vesicle , membrane , explosive material , cavitation , osmotic pressure , shock wave , polymersome , chemical physics , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , copolymer , composite material , chemistry , polymer , mechanics , aqueous solution , physics , medicine , biochemistry , organic chemistry , engineering , amphiphile , gene
Osmotic shock in a vesicle or cell is the stress build-up and subsequent rupture of the phospholipid membrane that occurs when a relatively high concentration of salt is unable to cross the membrane and instead an inflow of water alleviates the salt concentration gradient. This is a well-known failure mechanism for cells and vesicles (for example, hypotonic shock) and metal alloys (for example, hydrogen embrittlement). We propose the concept of collective osmotic shock, whereby a coordinated explosive fracture resulting from multiplexing the singular effects of osmotic shock at discrete sites within an ordered material results in regular bicontinuous structures. The concept is demonstrated here using self-assembled block copolymer micelles, yet it is applicable to organized heterogeneous materials where a minority component can be selectively degraded and solvated whilst ensconced in a matrix capable of plastic deformation. We discuss the application of these self-supported, perforated multilayer materials in photonics, nanofiltration and optoelectronics.
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