Highlights
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Workshops on Materials Science Labs for Teachers
Schuyler Patton (Central HS), Russ Composto, Karen Winey and Andrew McGhie
In 2008 The Penn MRSEC assisted a high school science teacher, Schuyler
Patton, to prepare a year-long elective course on materials science for
his high school, Central HS, Philadelphia. It started with one class of
33 students and it was very successful. In 2010-11, it was expanded to
two sections with 66 students. In summer 2010, the Penn MRSEC offered a
series of three hands-on workshops for teachers based on the laboratory
experiments used in this course. The themes of these workshops were a)
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Philly Materials Science and Engineering Day
LRSM Education & Outreach
In conjunction with the NOVA TV science program, the Penn MRSEC
collaborated with Penn and Drexel University Materials Science
Departments to arrange the first Philly Materials Science & Engineering Day
on Feb. 5, 2011, which introduced the general public in the
Philadelphia region to the world of materials. An extensive program was
arranged that included demonstrations from many LRSM graduate research
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Using a vice to change topology: theory and modeling insulators under strain The Topological Insulators Seed of the LRSM
Charlie Kane, Gene Mele and Andy Rappe
The topological insulating materials offer conductive surface states
that can be useful for quantum computing, catalysis, and other
applications. In this recent work, we (Young, Chowdhury, Walter, Mele,
Kane, and Rappe, under review, 2011) show that compressing the material
strengthens the topological insulating state, while expanding the
material eventually takes this behavior away completely. Using external
pressure as a control parameter suggests general ways to strengthen
this important physical effect.
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Protein Assembly at the Air-Water Interface
Tobias Baumgart and Ivan J. Dmochowski
Protein assembly at the air-water interface (AWI) occurs naturally in
many biological processes, and provides a method for creating ordered
biomaterials. However, the factors that control protein self-assembly at
the AWI are generally not well understood. Here, we describe the
behavior of a model protein, human serum albumin minimally labeled with
Texas Red dye (HSA-TR), using a new confocal microscopy technique
(Figure 1). Albumin was observed to form well-ordered, mesoscale
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Nanostructured programmable matter for functional architectures and devices
Ritesh Agarwal, Russ Composto, Marija Drndic, Cherie Kagan, Jay Kikkawa, Jennifer Lukes, Chris Murray and So-Jung Park
The objective of this Seed is to understand cooperative electronic,
optical and electromagnetic phenomena emerging from the interactions of
nanoscale building blocks. Recent work encompasses synthesis of
nanoparticles (figure right) and nanowires, and the investigation of how
nanocrystals can drive geometrical rearrangement in polymersome
micelles (figure right). A second breakthrough (figure below), developed
a ligand exchange process that enables flexible electronic devices
(FETs) based on nanocrystal assemblies
Aug 31, 2011
Northwestern University
Pd Dispersion on Opposing Polar LiNbO3 Surfaces
Andy Rappe, John Vohs and Dawn Bonnell
Pioneering experiments reported [upper left] the ability of
ferroelectric domain orientation to switch surface chemistry on and off,
finding unambiguous evidence that the polarity of a ferroelectric
surface can have a strong impact on the energetics of physisorption.
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Maquette protein engineering and construction for long-lived photo-induced charge separation
Les Dutton and Bohdana Discher
We have developed analytic methods that establish molecular
constraints to photochemical efficiency in the engineering and
construction of molecular photochemical materials and devices useful to
addressing the global energy challenge. The absence, to-date, of
analytic procedures has seriously handicapped progress in the
development of photochemical devices. The new methods will provide
important precise engineering guidelines to photochemical device
construction in the future.
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Engineering a virus-like particle via protein design
Marija Drndic, Jay Kikkawa, Bill DeGrado, and Mike Klein (Temple University)
We have designed specialized protein molecules that organize around
carbon nanotubes into an atomistically-predefined pattern. Targeted
design of such self-organization is a powerful tool for engineering at
the nano scale. For example, we have shown that our protein/nanotube
hybrid can be used to generate a regularly-spaced array of gold
nano-particle. Shown here is an exciting new concept we are currently
pursuing. We believe that our nanotube/protein complexes can be used to
Aug 31, 2011
University of Pennsylvania
Patterning within Amphiphilic Self-Assemblies using Charge, Curvature, and Crystallinity
Dennis Discher, Randy Kamien, Michael Klein, Paul Janmey and Andrea Liu
Design & engineering of modern devices increasingly requires
complex nano- and micro-structures. One area of research now showing
promise for creating such structures through simple solution techniques
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