Daniela J Kraft
@danielajkraft.bsky.social
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Professor in Soft Matter
I am very excited that our latest work is now out in
@nature.com
: Brownian mechanical metamaterials! Great work by Julio Melio, in collaboration with Martin van Hecke and Silke Henkes:
rdcu.be/e5H86
!
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Pivoting colloidal assemblies exhibit mechanical metamaterial behaviour
Nature - A method is described for the manufacture of pivoting colloidal assemblies comprising rotating diamond and rotating triangle geometries that show tunable folding and unfolding by thermal...
https://rdcu.be/e5H86
3 days ago
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Beautiful work by our group alumna Melissa Rinaldin!
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 month ago
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Floppy lattices are exciting model systems, however, so far, we have been making them by optical tweezers. Our newest work by
@yogeshshelke.bsky.social
and with
@danpearce.bsky.social
in
@natcomms.nature.com
uses self-assembly through tuning of the kinetic pathways:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
.
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Self-assembly pathways towards floppy colloidal square lattices - Nature Communications
Rearrangements govern many properties of materials and molecules, but it has been largely unexplored how to create flexible structures from the bottom up. Here, the authors use colloidal particle...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-67792-4
about 2 months ago
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
Ali Azadbakht
3 months ago
We built an open-source DIY optical tweezers setup and turned it into a teaching tool for the lab/classroom. Low-cost, microscope-based optical trapping you can actually build. Curious what you think 👇
www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGlH...
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Open Source DIY Optical Tweezers
YouTube video by Wfront Principle
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGlHxX-9Ro8
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Interested in doing a PhD in my group? I have an opening for a PhD student to work on understanding and designing nanomedicine-membrane interactions! Apply here:
careers.universiteitleiden.nl/job/Leiden-P...
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PhD position in understanding and designing nanomedicines-membranes interaction
PhD position in understanding and designing nanomedicines-membranes interaction
https://careers.universiteitleiden.nl/job/Leiden-PhD-position-in-understanding-and-designing-nanomedicines-membranes-interaction/1240761501/
6 months ago
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
Leiden Institute of Physics
7 months ago
#Activematter
research by Marine Le Blay, Joshua Saldi & Alexandre Morin from
@unileiden.bsky.social
published in
@natphys.nature.com
! Read more:
edu.nl/btmta
.
@leidenscience.bsky.social
#physics
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
Ali Azadbakht
8 months ago
Cell membranes bend when proteins, viruses or nanoparticles stick to them. Two nearby bends “feel” each other through the lipid sheet, a bit like masses interact through curved spacetime. But do they always attract? We set out to measure that directly.
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
Ali Azadbakht
8 months ago
🔗 Paper link below if you’d like the details.
doi.org/10.1039/d4sm...
🙌 Thanks to
@danielajkraft.bsky.social
for brilliant work and guidance, and to
@leidenphysics.bsky.social
for funding the project. Interested in membrane mechanics or how we perform experiments? Feel free to contact me.
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Repulsions and attractions between membrane-deforming spheres, Janus-particles, and opposite tube-like deformations in giant unilamellar vesicles
Lipid membrane deformations have been predicted to lead to indirect forces between the objects that induce these deformations. Recent experimental measurements have found an attractive interaction bet...
https://doi.org/10.1039/d4sm01415d
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
10 months ago
It was a huge pleasure to listen to
@danielajkraft.bsky.social
yesterday. Her talk was about ´Brownian mechanisms mechanical metamaterials and machines’. She is an invited professor on the Paris Science chair.
@cnrs.fr
@espciparispsl.bsky.social
@justinlrt.bsky.social
#liveSketching
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Anisotropic active particles cannot always simply turn to change their orientation after having reached a surface: as we show for active colloidal cubes, this can lead to several populations with different particles speeds. Now out in Langmuir!
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
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Fabrication and Characterization of Bimetallic Silica-Based and 3D-Printed Active Colloidal Cubes
Simulations on self-propelling active cubes reveal interesting behaviors at both the individual and the collective level, emphasizing the importance of developing experimental analogues that allow testing these theoretical predictions. The majority of experimental realizations of active colloidal cubes rely on light actuation and/or magnetic fields to have a persistent active mechanism and lack material versatility. Here, we propose a system of active bimetallic cubes whose propulsion mechanism is based on a catalytic reaction and study their behavior. We realize such a system from synthetic silica cuboids and 3D-printed microcubes, followed by the deposition of gold and platinum layers on their surface. We characterize the colloids’ dynamics for different thicknesses of the gold layer at low and high hydrogen peroxide concentrations. We show that the thickness of the base gold layer has only a minor effect on the self-propulsion speed and, in addition, induces a gravitational torque during sedimentation. For low activity, this gravitational torque orients the particles such that their velocity director is pointing out of the plane, thus effectively suppressing propulsion. We find that a higher active force can remedy the effects of torque, resulting in all possible particle orientations, including one with the metal cap on the side, which is favorable for in-plane propulsion. Finally, we use 3D printing to compare our results to cubes made from a different material, size, and roundness and demonstrate that the speed scaling with increasing particle size originates from the size-dependent drag. Our experiments extend the fabrication of active cubes to different materials and propulsion mechanisms and highlight that the design of active particles with anisotropic shapes requires consideration of the interplay between shape and activity to achieve favorable sedimentation and efficient in-plane propulsion.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.langmuir.5c00815
10 months ago
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reposted by
Daniela J Kraft
Sarah Veatch
11 months ago
I know it's crazy timing, nuts but Michigan Biophysics is hiring on the tenure track! App deadline is May 15. Join our interdisciplinary community.
careers.umich.edu/job_detail/2...
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ASST PROFESSOR | U-M Careers
https://careers.umich.edu/job_detail/261588/asst-professor
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