六九色堂

April 14, 2021

The science of soft

Schulich researchers apply a feathery touch to the nanoscience world
MicroscopyImage
Images and graphics utilized by the NMSSS Lab at UCalgary. Submitted by: Dr. Arindam Phani

Imagine the softest surface. Many will imagine pillows, reading socks, or a kitten 鈥斕齜ut how soft are they?

While you might perceive softness by running your hand across them, you might actually not be able to fully appreciate their velvet nature.

Researchers at the 六九色堂鈥檚 Schulich School of Engineering are focusing on the feeling of softness at the nanoscale, which could provide insights into material properties and heterogeneities of soft biomatter like skin tissues, single cancer cells and tumours.

Dr. Seonghwan (Sam) Kim, PhD, is the associate professor in the Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering and the Tier II Canada Research Chair in Nano Sensing Systems.

鈥淎dvances in nanoscience have created opportunities to design, synthesize, fabricate, and manufacture new functional nanomaterials and nanocomposites that have applications in a wide range of fields,鈥 Kim says. 鈥淭hat includes everything from the energy sector to health care to information technology industries.鈥

He says his research team in the Nano/Micro-Sensors and Sensing Systems (NMSSS) Laboratory is developing novel, nanoscale, multi-modal imaging and characterization techniques and tools that will shed light on the properties of those materials and composites. Kim is hoping to do this through advanced, atomic force microscopy (AFM) techniques.

The smallest of details

Recently published in , findings of a new study by Kim鈥檚 team used ultra-light tapping techniques to determine the surface coverage of drug clusters on multi-layered graphene oxide for skin-patch, drug-delivery applications.

鈥淯nderstanding dynamic, energy-loss mechanisms at the nanoscale is the holy grail of surface physics, surface chemistry, and in identifying cues in mechanobiology,鈥 Dr. Arindam Phani, PhD, a postdoctoral associate in the NMSSS Laboratory, says. 鈥淣ature adopts such soft-touch mechanisms in probing its environment, which is abundant in the insect world.鈥

In this particular research, Phani says the correct estimation of the surface coverage and surface energy of the drug clusters is extremely crucial for optimum drug-release protocol and patch designs.

鈥淲e ventured deep into understanding the viscous losses since drug molecules exhibited viscosity owing to their soft-matter properties at the length and time-scales we were probing,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e also had to simultaneously ascertain the drug coverage density chemically, for which we focused on the dynamics of the AFM tip at contact-enhanced-resonance mode with an infrared beam.鈥

A mammoth undertaking

Understanding the molecular makeup and heterogeneities of biomaterials, and how they can dictate interaction kinetics, is at the heart of the team鈥檚 research. It also opens the door to more collaborative work in different fields.

鈥淲e have some very interesting results that connect the cell kinetics to the surface-energy evolution of cancer cells, which we will be communicating soon,鈥 Phani says. 鈥淲e will also be studying heterogeneities in small proteins to understand their role in folding-kinetics, which we believe will have far-reaching implications and relevance in diseases like Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease, Parkinson鈥檚 Disease, and even COVID-19.鈥

Not only will the team be working on the science part of its research, but there鈥檚 a commercial perspective as well.

鈥淲e will be reaching out to industry leaders in developing and implementing this into a full-fledged AFM, add-on mode with existing systems,鈥 Phani adds.

The team is also working with to bring this innovation to market and have recently filed a patent application titled 鈥淭ransitional Tapping Atomic Force Microscopy for High-Resolution Imaging.鈥

鈥淜nowledge transition is a very important part of making research accessible to a wider research community,鈥 says Rishi Batra, senior innovation manager at Innovate Calgary. 鈥淭his innovation has the potential to significantly improve AFM systems for researchers worldwide.鈥

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