122 research outputs found
Multi-method in-vitro and in-vivo evaluation of coacervation and deposition behavior in cleansing formulations
The inclusion of cationic polymers in cleansing formulations is a commonly utilized practice to provide conditioned after-feel to skin and hair and increase the efficiency of insoluble benefit agent deposition. However, predicting the efficiency of polymer-surfactant complexation (coacervation) and the resulting deposition efficacy of polymer complexes and insoluble actives purely from formulation components remains a challenge, due to the complex interactions of polymer, surfactant and solution properties. In this work, we validate and implement multiple methods for rapidly screening and quantifying dilution-induced polymer precipitation and deposition in cleansing formulations. We then utilize these methods to verify and compare deposition behavior in several well-utilized polymer-surfactant systems and commercial cleansing products.
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Effects of Particle Shape on Growth Dynamics at Edges of Evaporating Colloidal Drops
We study the influence of particle shape on growth processes at the edges of
evaporating drops. Aqueous suspensions of colloidal particles evaporate on
glass slides, and convective flows during evaporation carry particles from drop
center to drop edge, where they accumulate. The resulting particle deposits
grow inhomogeneously from the edge in two-dimensions, and the deposition front,
or growth line, varies spatio-temporally. Measurements of the fluctuations of
the deposition front during evaporation enable us to identify distinct growth
processes that depend strongly on particle shape. Sphere deposition exhibits a
classic Poisson like growth process; deposition of slightly anisotropic
particles, however, belongs to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality
class, and deposition of highly anisotropic ellipsoids appears to belong to a
third universality class, characterized by KPZ fluctuations in the presence of
quenched disorder
Helical Packings and Phase Transformations of Soft Spheres in Cylinders
The phase behavior of helical packings of thermoresponsive microspheres
inside glass capillaries is studied as a function of volume fraction. Stable
packings with long-range orientational order appear to evolve abruptly to
disordered states as particle volume fraction is reduced, consistent with
recent hard sphere simulations. We quantify this transition using correlations
and susceptibilities of the orientational order parameter psi_6. The emergence
of coexisting metastable packings, as well as coexisting ordered and disordered
states, is also observed. These findings support the notion of phase
transition-like behavior in quasi-1D systems.Comment: 5 pages, with additional 4 pages of supplemental material, accepted
to Physical Review E: Rapid Communication
Elasticity-Dependent Self-assembly of Micro-Templated Chromonic Liquid Crystal Films
We explore micropatterned director structures of aqueous lyotropic chromonic
liquid crystal (LCLC) films created on square lattice cylindrical-micropost
substrates. The structures are manipulated by modulating the LCLC mesophases
and their elastic properties via concentration through drying. Nematic LCLC
films exhibit preferred bistable alignment along the diagonals of the micropost
lattice. Columnar LCLC films, dried from nematics, form two distinct director
and defect configurations: a diagonally aligned director pattern with local
squares of defects, and an off-diagonal configuration with zig-zag defects. The
formation of these states appears to be tied to the relative splay and bend
free energy costs of the initial nematic films. The observed nematic and
columnar configurations are understood numerically using a Landau-de Gennes
free energy model. Among other attributes, the work provide first examples of
quasi-2D micropatterning of LC films in the columnar phase and lyotropic LC
films in general, and it demonstrates alignment and configuration switching of
typically difficult-to-align LCLC films via bulk elastic properties.Comment: 9 pages; 9 figures; accepted for publication in Soft Matte
Influence of Particle Shape on Bending Rigidity of Colloidal Monolayer Membranes and Particle Deposition during Droplet Evaporation in Confined Geometries
We investigate the influence of particle shape on the bending rigidity of colloidal monolayer membranes (CMMs) and on evaporative processes associated with these membranes. Aqueous suspensions of colloidal particles are confined between glass plates and allowed to evaporate. Confinement creates ribbonlike air-water interfaces and facilitates measurement and characterization of CMM geometry during drying. Interestingly, interfacial buckling events occur during evaporation. Extension of the description of buckled elastic membranes to our quasi-2D geometry enables the determination of the ratio of CMM bending rigidity to its Young’s modulus. Bending rigidity increases with increasing particle anisotropy, and particle deposition during evaporation is strongly affected by membrane elastic properties. During drying, spheres are deposited heterogeneously, but ellipsoids are not. Apparently, increased bending rigidity reduces contact line bending and pinning and induces uniform deposition of ellipsoids. Surprisingly, suspensions of spheres doped with a small number of ellipsoids are also deposited uniformly
Effects of Particle Shape on Growth Dynamics at Edges of Evaporating Drops of Colloidal Suspensions
We study the influence of particle shape on growth processes at the edges of evaporating drops. Aqueous suspensions of colloidal particles evaporate on glass slides, and convective flows during evaporation carry particles from drop center to drop edge, where they accumulate. The resulting particle deposits grow inhomogeneously from the edge in two dimensions, and the deposition front, or growth line, varies spatiotemporally. Measurements of the fluctuations of the deposition front during evaporation enable us to identify distinct growth processes that depend strongly on particle shape. Sphere deposition exhibits a classic Poisson-like growth process; deposition of slightly anisotropic particles, however, belongs to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang universality class, and deposition of highly anisotropic ellipsoids appears to belong to a third universality class, characterized by Kardar-Parisi-Zhang fluctuations in the presence of quenched disorder
Vibrational and structural signatures of the crossover between dense glassy and sparse gel-like attractive colloidal packings
We investigate the vibrational modes of quasi-two-dimensional disordered colloidal packings of hard colloidal spheres with short-range attractions as a function of packing fraction. Certain properties of the vibrational density of states (vDOS) are shown to correlate with the density and structure of the samples (i.e., in sparsely versus densely packed samples). Specifically, a crossover from dense glassy to sparse gel-like states is suggested by an excess of phonon modes at low frequency and by a variation in the slope of the vDOS with frequency at low frequency. This change in phonon mode distribution is demonstrated to arise largely from localized vibrations that involve individual and/or small clusters of particles with few local bonds. Conventional order parameters and void statistics did not exhibit obvious gel-glass signatures as a function of volume fraction. These mode behaviors and accompanying structural insights offer a potentially new set of indicators for identification of glass-gel transitions and for assignment of gel-like versus glass-like character to a disordered solid material
Discovery and saturation analysis of cancer genes across 21 tumour types
Although a few cancer genes are mutated in a high proportion of tumours of a given type (>20%), most are mutated at intermediate frequencies (2–20%). To explore the feasibility of creating a comprehensive catalogue of cancer genes, we analysed somatic point mutations in exome sequences from 4,742 human cancers and their matched normal-tissue samples across 21 cancer types. We found that large-scale genomic analysis can identify nearly all known cancer genes in these tumour types. Our analysis also identified 33 genes that were not previously known to be significantly mutated in cancer, including genes related to proliferation, apoptosis, genome stability, chromatin regulation, immune evasion, RNA processing and protein homeostasis. Down-sampling analysis indicates that larger sample sizes will reveal many more genes mutated at clinically important frequencies. We estimate that near-saturation may be achieved with 600–5,000 samples per tumour type, depending on background mutation frequency. The results may help to guide the next stage of cancer genomics
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Whole exome sequencing of circulating tumor cells provides a window into metastatic prostate cancer
Comprehensive analyses of cancer genomes promise to inform prognoses and precise cancer treatments. A major barrier, however, is inaccessibility of metastatic tissue. A potential solution is to characterize circulating tumor cells (CTCs), but this requires overcoming the challenges of isolating rare cells and sequencing low-input material. Here we report an integrated process to isolate, qualify and sequence whole exomes of CTCs with high fidelity, using a census-based sequencing strategy. Power calculations suggest that mapping of >99.995% of the standard exome is possible in CTCs. We validated our process in two prostate cancer patients including one for whom we sequenced CTCs, a lymph node metastasis and nine cores of the primary tumor. Fifty-one of 73 CTC mutations (70%) were observed in matched tissue. Moreover, we identified 10 early-trunk and 56 metastatic-trunk mutations in the non-CTC tumor samples and found 90% and 73% of these, respectively, in CTC exomes. This study establishes a foundation for CTC genomics in the clinic
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