Review in 2012

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  • Rubber-filler systems have been widely used in industry. Fillers are not dispersed homogeneously and often form hierarchical structures in rubber matrices over a wide range of length scale from nanometer to micron meters, such as primary particles, aggregates and agglomerates. The combined scattering methods are powerful tools to characterize the structures quantitatively.

    • Mikihito Takenaka
    Review
  • A method is described that can predict the miscibility of the great majority of polyolefins based just on their chemical architecture. The miscibility of polyolefins is shown to be essentially controlled by their solubility parameters, d, which in turn depend on the chain dimensions of the chains through the packing length lp. A method to estimate lp from chain architecture is also shown, giving a very powerful mechanism to predict the mixing thermodynamics from chemical structure.

    • David J Lohse
    Review
  • Grazing incidence small-angle neutron scattering (GISANS) allows for the investigation of nanostructures in thin films and at surfaces due to the use of a reflection geometry. Possibilities and challenges of GISANS are reviewed with several different examples of thin nanostructured polymer films. With GISANS buried lateral structures can be probed destruction free using the variable-probed depth as function of the incidence angle. By this, averaged statistical information is detected over the large illuminated sample surface.

    • Peter Müller-Buschbaum
    Review
  • Various properties of ultrathin polymer films differ substantially from their bulk values. However, the critical question is whether the unusual properties are uniform throughout the films. To explore the presence of heterogeneous viscosity distributions, we have established grazing-incidence X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy for single polymer films with embedded metal nanoparticles that act as markers. In addition, the combined use of resonance enhanced X-ray scattering enables us to intensify the probing electrical field in the regions of interest within a single polymer film.

    • Naisheng Jiang
    • Maya K Endoh
    • Tadanori Koga
    Review
  • With the increase in the number of implant-dependent surgeries and biofilm-associated complications, there is a need to counteract and deal with this phenomenon. This has led to various approaches to elucidate the etiology and pathogenesis of the infection. This review critically evaluates the formation, characteristics, pathogenicity and the molecular genetics of both implant- and nonimplant-associated medical biofilm.

    • Venkatesan Nandakumar
    • Samuel Chittaranjan
    • Mukesh Doble
    Review
  • Various types of dendrimer-based nanomaterials, such as poly(ethylene glycol)-modified dendrimers, functional shell-bearing dendrimers, thermosensitive dendrimers, dendron-based lipid assemblies and dendrimer-gold nanoparticle (NP) hybrids were developed by surface modification, assembling and hybrid formation strategies. These dendrimers and dendrimer-based nanomaterials exhibited various bio-related functions, such as drug encapsulation, stimuli-responsive transition and photo-induced heat generation. Based on these functions, these dendrimers and dendrimer-based nanomaterials have potential usefulness in the biomedical field, such as target-specific drug delivery and non-invasive therapy.

    • Kenji Kono
    Review
  • Dendrimers have attracting great interests in the design of functional materials. Because the core porphyrin unit in dendrimer porphyrin (DP) is surrounded by large poly(benzyl ether) dendritic wedges with ionic periphery, various functional nano-devices, such as DP-loaded polyion complex micelles, ternary complex system for gene delivery, polymer-metal complex micelle, hollow nanocapsules for combination cancer therapy, DP-immobilized surface for diagnostic tools, have been designed through electrostatic interaction with oppositely charged polymeric materials.

    • Young-Hwan Jeong
    • Hee-Jae Yoon
    • Woo-Dong Jang
    Review
  • For high-performance boron neutron capture therapy , core-shell-type biodegradable nanoparticle-containing boron cluster is designed in order to improve accumulation tendency to tumor. Copolymerization of styrene carrying carborane with poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(lactide) (PEG-b-PLA-MA), possessing a methacryloyl group at the PLA end is performed. The accumulation of the polymerized micelles in tumor is much higher than that of the non-polymerized micelles because of the enhancement of the stability of the micelles. Thermal neutron irradiation exhibits significant suppression of tumor growth in the mice treated with the polymerized micelles.

    • Shogo Sumitani
    • Yukio Nagasaki
    Review