Author: Anna Roig

Seminar of Dr. Ali Mohraz next Tuesday 17th of November at 3pm

“Colloids at Fluid Interfaces: Opportunities for Advanced Materials Synthesis”
Ali Mohraz, Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of California, Irvine

Particle seAli Mohrazquestration at the interface of immiscible fluids has been known for more than a century and exploited in the formulation of solid-stabilized (Pickering) emulsions for drug delivery, oil recovery, food, and personal care products, to name a few.  More recently, new classes of multi-phase mixtures have emerged that exploit interfacial colloid jamming, bridging, ordering, and aggregation for the self-assembly of complex higher-order structures from colloidal building blocks, such as bicontinuous interfacially jammed emulsion gels (bijels), or bridged emulsion gels. The multiphase nature of these mixtures makes them excellent templates for the synthesis of composite materials with tunable morphology at the nano- to micrometer scales, and our group has recently demonstrated various examples of functional materials that can be derived from them.  However, to expand these capabilities into a robust materials synthesis platform, the factors that mediate the mechanical stability and processability of these colloidal mixtures must be better understood.  In this talk, I will review the fundamentals and recent developments in colloidal self-assembly at fluid interfaces, present a novel materials synthesis route that we have pioneered based on these concepts, and discuss the applications of our technology in electrochemical energy conversion and storage, sensing, catalysis, and tissue engineering.  Finally, I will discuss our ongoing efforts to better understand the link between the microstructure, rheology, and processability of this new class of soft materials.

Ali Mohraz received his BSc, ME, and PhD in Chemical Engineering from Azad University, The City College of New York, and The University of Michigan, respectively, and his postdoctoral training at the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at The University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign.  He is currently Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of California, Irvine.  Dr. Mohraz’s primary research interests are in colloid science and complex fluids engineering, including colloidal assembly at fluid interfaces and microstructural evolution of complex fluids under transient large-strain deformations.

Additional information: Anna Laromaine

Laura Asturias

Postdoctoral fellow
January 2015 – July 2016
Topic: Metallic nanoparticles and carbon-based sensors for the detection of heavy metals in seawater. 

2015

Laura Alquezar
February-June 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Luisa Barrera 
June-August 2015
3rd year Materials Science and Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA

Daniel Bertran
February-June 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Xavier Frías
February-June 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Marina Llenas
February-July 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

José Luis Ocaña 
February-June 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Pol Sallés
February-July 2015
4th year Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Pablo Sánchez
July 2014-June 
2015
4th year Physics and Mathematics
Final year project Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Raluca Deac
March-June 2015
Visiting Ph.D. Student
Babes-Bolaiy University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Fabrizio Guzzetta 
September-October 2015
Visiting Ph.D. Student
Universitat Jaume I de Castelló

Qianzhe Zhang


qianzhezhang
qizhang@icmab.es

+34 93 5801853 (ext 293)  

PhD topic: Controlling the microstructure of epitaxial quartz films 

Supervisors: Martí Gich & Adrián Carretero (IES Univ. Montpellier CNRS)     

 

Paper in collaboration with ICN2 in RSC Advances

Dual T1/T2 MRI contrast agent based on hybrid SPION@coordination polymer nanoparticles

The study GAby M. Borges, S. Yu, A. Laromaine, A. Roig, S. Súarez-García, J. Lorenzo,D. Ruiz-Molina and F. Novio* has just been published in RSC Advances 2015, 5, 86779–86783.

The paper reports a novel hybrid T1/T2 dual MRI contrast agent by the encapsulation of SPIONs (T2 contrast agent) into an iron-based coordination polymer with T1-weighted signal. This new hybrid material presents improved relaxometry and low cytotoxicity, which make it suitable for its use as contrast agent for MRI.