Soft materials are all around us and play a significant role in our everyday lives. They include materials such as synthetic polymers, biopolymers, liquid crystals, colloids and nanoparticles, animal and plant cells are found in many foods, personal care products, clothing, medicines, paints and inks and biological tissues to name but a few
A particularly striking property of many of these systems is the viscoelastic nature of their mechanical response. When deformed on short timescales these materials behave like elastic solids and on longer time scales they exhibit flow characteristics that are more like a viscous liquid. This particular effect is due to the fact that the relaxation times of the component parts of these systems are comparable to experimentally accessible timescales. These materials have such interesting properties because their constituent parts have structural elements that have dimensions which lie somewhere between the atomic length scale (10-10 metres) and macroscopic length scales (1 millimetres). For example, polymers contain long chain molecules that can be tens of nanometres in size and colloids contain small particles that can be anywhere from five nanometres to one micron in diameter.
At Nottingham we have a range of different active research projects in soft materials physics. These include (but are not limited) to studies of:
We have a good balance of ongoing pure and applied research in these areas and we welcome applications from any new students wishing to do a PhD in our group.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 154502 (2010)
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