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VA RESEARCHERS AND COLLEAGUES EARN COVER OF
PRESTIGIOUS SCIENCE PUBLICATION -- Have unveiled
a method
for developing mechanically-reinforced polymer
nanocomposites.

For more information about VA research, use the
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http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=va+research&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=27247
Story below:
-------------------------
Research by Case School of Engineering
professors, VA collaborators earn cover of prestigious science publication
Cleveland, OH -- An interdisciplinary team from
the department of macromolecular science and engineering at Case Western
Reserve University, the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center and the
NASA Glenn Research Center earned the December 2007 cover of Nature
Nanotechnology, one of the world's most prestigious scholarly journals
covering research in nanoscience and nanotechnology.
Jeffrey R. Capadona, associate investigator at the VA's Advanced Platform
Technology (APT) Center and Christoph Weder and Stuart Rowan, professors
of macromolecular science and engineering at the Case School of
Engineering and their colleagues have unveiled a method for developing
mechanically-reinforced polymer nanocomposites.
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The incorporation of nanoparticles into polymers
is a design approach that is used in all areas of materials science, says
Weder, who is the senior author of the paper, adding that in the past, the
broad technological utilization of polymer nanocomposites has been stifled
by a lack of effective methods to control nanoparticle dispersion in
materials.
In their new approach, the team used a process in which the reinforcing
nanoparticles are first assembled into a three-dimensional network through
gelation of nanoparticle dispersion, essentially forming a template. This
template can then be filled with any polymer of choice by exchanging the
solvent with a polymer-containing solution.
"Through the use of this new technique, we have been able to take the most
incompatible components and show that they can be used to make compatible
materials," Weder said.
While the research primarily focused on cellulose "whiskers" as the choice
of nanoparticles since they offer useful mechanical properties and are
readily obtained from renewable biosources such as wood and cotton,
Capadona explained, the team also started to investigate an array of
different polymers and nanofibers, demonstrating that the technique has
broad applicability.
In addition to Weder, Capadona and Rowan, other members of the research
team include Dustin J. Tyler, the Nord Distinguished Assistant Professor
of Biomedical Engineering at Case Western Reserve and APT associate
director; Otto van den Berg and Michael Schroeter, both former
postdoctoral researchers in Weder's Functional Polymer Laboratory; and
Lynn A. Capadona of the polymeric materials branch, NASA Glenn Research
Center. While the work was primarily conducted in the Case School of
Engineering's department of macromolecular science and engineering, the
Department of Veterans Affairs and the VA Rehabilitation R&D Center of
Excellence in Advanced Platform Technology (APT) contributed financially
and played an important role in this research uniting Weder, Capadona,
Tyler and Rowan to conduct research in the area of adaptive nanocomposite
materials, which are now fabricated by the new process.
Case Western Reserve University has filed for a patent protecting the
technology.
The APT center is a cohesive intellectual community that offers its
investigators the opportunity to meet regularly, have discussions within
and outside of their fields, participate in electronic mailing lists, and
attend educational and scientific conferences. It allows access to
state-of-the-art facilities including MEMS design and fabrication, mixed
signal and wireless communication laboratories, telemetry laboratories,
support staff and other technical and clinical resources.
Nature Nanotechnology is a multidisciplinary journal that publishes papers
of the highest quality and significance in all areas of nanoscience and
nanotechnology. The journal covers research into the design,
characterization and production of structures, devices and systems that
involve the manipulation and control of materials and phenomena at atomic,
molecular and macromolecular scales.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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