Skip to main content

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

Volume 10 Issue 1, January 2011

The only way diamond can be polished is by pressing it against small diamond crystals, but this works well only for certain crystallographic orientations. The details of this wear mechanism have now been uncovered in simulations that suggest wear occurs via a thin amorphous layer on the diamond surface.

Cover design by David Shand.

Letter by Pastewka et al.

News & Views by Fineberg

Editorial

  • This two-dimensional crystal keeps playing a dominant role in physics and materials science.

    Editorial

    Advertisement

Top of page ⤴

Research Highlights

Top of page ⤴

News & Views

  • The friction and wear of materials is part of our everyday experience, and yet these processes are not well understood. The example of diamond highlights wear processes that result from bumping atoms, showing that the devil is indeed in the details.

    • Jay Fineberg
    News & Views
  • Empty liquids and equilibrium gels have so far been only theoretical possibilities, predicted for colloids with patchy interactions. But evidence of both has now been found in Laponite, a widely studied clay.

    • Willem K. Kegel
    • Henk N. W. Lekkerkerker
    News & Views
  • The practical use of electronic ratchets has long been hampered by low output powers and cryogenic operating temperatures. A pentacene-based organic ratchet can now drive electronic circuitry at room temperature.

    • Peter Hänggi
    News & Views
  • A suitably chosen thin layer inserted between a ferromagnetic electrode and an organic semiconductor allows control over the polarization of the injected spins.

    • Paul Ruden
    News & Views
  • High annealing temperatures have limited the technological potential of solution-processed metal oxide semiconductors. It is now shown that high-quality films can be formed below 250 °C using precursors that are hydrolysed on-chip.

    • Douglas Keszler
    News & Views
  • The first diffraction patterns from the individual atomic packing clusters in a metallic glass finally enable the direct study of local order in amorphous alloys.

    • Evan Ma
    • Ze Zhang
    News & Views
  • Atomic force microscopy experiments on individual blood platelets reveal their dynamic contractile response to varied stiffness of the substrate.

    • Allen Ehrlicher
    • John H. Hartwig
    News & Views
Top of page ⤴

Review Article

Top of page ⤴

Letter

  • The atomic configuration of metallic glasses is a long-standing issue important to the understanding of their properties. Nanobeam electron diffraction experiments now enable a direct determination of the local atomic order in a metallic glass.

    • Akihiko Hirata
    • Pengfei Guan
    • Mingwei Chen
    Letter
  • The only way diamond can be polished is by pressing it against small diamond crystals, but this works well only for certain crystallographic orientations. The details of this wear mechanism have now been uncovered in simulations that suggest wear occurs via a thin amorphous layer on the diamond surface.

    • Lars Pastewka
    • Stefan Moser
    • Michael Moseler
    Letter
  • The chemical versatility of organic semiconductors promises to be of great use to electronics and spintronics. As an example, it is now demonstrated that the spin polarization of extracted carriers from an organic semiconductor device can be controlled by the insertion of a thin layer of polar material. This approach opens up ideas for future spintronic device concepts.

    • L. Schulz
    • L. Nuccio
    • A. J. Drew
    Letter
  • Ratchet systems can extract work from non-equilibrium processes. Yet present electronic ratchets only operate at cryogenic temperatures and generate low currents, which are clear limitations for their practical use. Now, organic electronic ratchets providing enough power to drive simple logic circuits at room temperature have been realized.

    • Erik M. Roeling
    • Wijnand Chr. Germs
    • Martijn Kemerink
    Letter
  • Theoretical models of colloids with directional and anisotropic interactions have predicted the existence of both liquids with vanishing density, and arrested networks at equilibrium — that is, not undergoing phase separation. Experimental evidence of empty liquids and equilibrium gels is now provided for Laponite, a synthetic clay. These observations further our understanding of anisotropic interactions in colloidal suspensions.

    • Barbara Ruzicka
    • Emanuela Zaccarelli
    • Francesco Sciortino
    Letter
  • Blood platelets aggregate to form clots that prevent haemorrhage. Knowledge of single-platelet mechanics is scarce, however. Atomic force microscopy experiments now show that platelets contract rapidly on contact with fibrinogen, and adhere strongly to multiple fibrin polymers, enhancing the elasticity of clots. These findings are relevant to disorders of platelet function, such as thrombosis.

    • Wilbur A. Lam
    • Ovijit Chaudhuri
    • Daniel A. Fletcher
    Letter
  • A one-step preparation method of electrospun, synthetic scaffolds with controlled surface chemistry and functionality is reported. On addition of amphiphilic macromolecules, non-specific protein adsorption on the fibres’ surfaces is reduced, and by the further covalent attachment of certain peptide sequences to the fibres, specific bioactivation of the scaffold is achieved.

    • Dirk Grafahrend
    • Karl-Heinz Heffels
    • Jürgen Groll
    Letter
Top of page ⤴

Article

  • Sodium layered oxides are low-dimensional and strongly correlated systems that have been extensively studied because of their intriguing structural and physical properties. Electrochemical sodium intercalation is now used to investigate their different phase domains and thermal stability.

    • R. Berthelot
    • D. Carlier
    • C. Delmas
    Article
Top of page ⤴

Corrigendum

Top of page ⤴

Focus

  • Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov were awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics "for groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene". To celebrate the event, in this web focus we have gathered some of the most prominent papers on this one-atom-thick layer of graphite that Nature Materialshas published in the past four years.

    Focus
Top of page ⤴

Search

Quick links