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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Tokarev is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Tokarev.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012

Butterfly proboscis: combining a drinking straw with a nanosponge facilitated diversification of feeding habits

Daria Monaenkova; Matthew S. Lehnert; Taras Andrukh; Charles E. Beard; Binyamin Rubin; Alexander Tokarev; Wah-Keat Lee; Peter H. Adler; Konstantin G. Kornev

The ability of Lepidoptera, or butterflies and moths, to drink liquids from rotting fruit and wet soil, as well as nectar from floral tubes, raises the question of whether the conventional view of the proboscis as a drinking straw can account for the withdrawal of fluids from porous substrates or of films and droplets from floral tubes. We discovered that the proboscis promotes capillary pull of liquids from diverse sources owing to a hierarchical pore structure spanning nano- and microscales. X-ray phase-contrast imaging reveals that Plateau instability causes liquid bridges to form in the food canal, which are transported to the gut by the muscular sucking pump in the head. The dual functionality of the proboscis represents a key innovation for exploiting a vast range of nutritional sources. We suggest that future studies of the adaptive radiation of the Lepidoptera take into account the role played by the structural organization of the proboscis. A transformative two-step model of capillary intake and suctioning can be applied not only to butterflies and moths but also potentially to vast numbers of other insects such as bees and flies.


Nano Letters | 2012

Field-Directed Self-Assembly with Locking Nanoparticles

Mikhail Motornov; Sergiy Malynych; Deepthi S. Pippalla; Bogdan Zdyrko; Halyna Royter; Yuri Roiter; Mathew Kahabka; Alexander Tokarev; Ihor Tokarev; Ekaterina B. Zhulina; Konstantin G. Kornev; Igor Luzinov; Sergiy Minko

A reversible locking mechanism is established for the generation of anisotropic nanostructures by a magnetic field pulse in liquid matrices by balancing the thermal energy, short-range attractive and long-range repulsive forces, and dipole-dipole interactions using a specially tailored polymer shell of nanoparticles. The locking mechanism is used to precisely regulate the dimensions of self-assembled magnetic nanoparticle chains and to generate and disintegrate three-dimensional (3D) nanostructured materials in solvents and polymers.


Langmuir | 2012

Magnetic rotational spectroscopy with nanorods to probe time-dependent rheology of microdroplets.

Alexander Tokarev; Igor Luzinov; Jeffery R. Owens; Konstantin G. Kornev

In situ characterization of minute amounts of fluids that rapidly change their rheological properties is a challenge. In this paper, the rheological properties of fluids were evaluated by examining the behavior of magnetic nanorods in a rotating magnetic field. We proposed a theory describing the rotation of a magnetic nanorod in a fluid when its viscosity increases with time exponentially fast. To confirm the theory, we studied the time-dependent rheology of microdroplets of 2-hydroxyethyl-methacrylate (HEMA)/diethylene glycol dimethacylate (DEGDMA)-based hydrogel during photopolymerization synthesis. We demonstrated that magnetic rotational spectroscopy provides rich physicochemical information about the gelation process. The method allows one to completely specify the time-dependent viscosity by directly measuring characteristic viscosity and characteristic time. Remarkably, one can analyze not only the polymer solution, but also the suspension enriched with the gel domains being formed. Since the probing nanorods are measured in nanometers, this method can be used for the in vivo mapping of the rheological properties of biofluids and polymers on a microscopic level at short time intervals when other methods fall short.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Probing viscosity of nanoliter droplets of butterfly saliva by magnetic rotational spectroscopy

Alexander Tokarev; Bethany Kaufman; Yu Gu; Taras Andrukh; Peter H. Adler; Konstantin G. Kornev

Magnetic rotational spectroscopy was employed for rheological analysis of nanoliter droplets of butterfly saliva. Saliva viscosity of butterflies is 4–5 times greater than that of water and similar to that of 30%–40% sucrose solutions at 25 °C. Hence, viscosity stratification would not be expected when butterflies feed on nectar with 30%–40% sugar concentrations. We did not observe any viscoelastic effects or non-Newtonian behavior of saliva droplets. Thus, butterfly saliva is significantly different rheologically from that of humans, which demonstrates a viscoelastic behavior.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Multifunctional magnetic rotator for micro and nanorheological studies.

Alexander Tokarev; Alexey Aprelev; Mikhail Zakharov; Guzeliya Korneva; Yury Gogotsi; Konstantin G. Kornev

We report on the development of a multifunctional magnetic rotator that has been built and used during the last five years by two groups from Clemson and Drexel Universities studying the rheological properties of microdroplets. This magnetic rotator allows one to generate rotating magnetic fields in a broad frequency band, from hertz to tens kilohertz. We illustrate its flexibility and robustness by conducting the rheological studies of simple and polymeric fluids at the nano and microscale. First we reproduce a temperature-dependent viscosity of a synthetic oil used as a viscosity standard. Magnetic rotational spectroscopy with suspended nickel nanorods was used in these studies. As a second example, we converted the magnetic rotator into a pump with precise controlled flow modulation. Using multiwalled carbon nanotubes, we were able to estimate the shear modulus of sickle hemoglobin polymer. We believe that this multifunctional magnetic system will be useful not only for micro and nanorheological studies, but it will find much broader applications requiring remote controlled manipulation of micro and nanoobjects.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Highly Efficient Phase Boundary Biocatalysis with Enzymogel Nanoparticles

Olena Kudina; Andrey Zakharchenko; Oleksandr Trotsenko; Alexander Tokarev; Leonid Ionov; Georgi Stoychev; Nikolay Puretskiy; Scott W. Pryor; Andriy Voronov; Sergiy Minko

The enzymogel nanoparticle made of a magnetic core and polymer brush shell demonstrates a novel type of remote controlled phase-boundary biocatalysis that involves remotely directed binding to and engulfing insoluble substrates, high mobility, and stability of the catalytic centers. The mobile enzymes reside in the polymer brush scaffold and shuttle between the enzymogel interior and surface of the engulfed substrate in the bioconversion process. Biocatalytic activity of the mobile enzymes is preserved in the enzymogel while the brush-like architecture favors the efficient interfacial interaction when the enzymogel spreads over the substrate and extends substantially the reaction area as compared with rigid particles.


8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SCIENTIFIC AND CLINICAL APPLICATIONS OF MAGNETIC CARRIERS | 2010

Magnetic Nanorods for Optofluidic Applications

Alexander Tokarev; Binyamin Rubin; Monte S. Bedford; Konstantin G. Kornev

We have developed a method for laser beam manipulation by using a colloid of nickel nanorods produced by electroplating chemistry. It is shown that the shape of the laser beam passing through a colloid of nickel nanorods can be altered by varying the applied magnetic field. This effect is caused by multiple scattering and diffraction of the laser beam by the nanorods. Compared with spherical nanoparticles, magnetic nanorods are better suited for illumination applications because they are stable in a rotating magnetic field. By rotating the diffraction pattern, one can illuminate a large area.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Magnetospinning of Nano‐ and Microfibers

Alexander Tokarev; Oleksandr Trotsenko; Ian Griffiths; Howard A. Stone; Sergiy Minko

Magnetospinning is a new method for spinning of continuous micro- and nano-fibers using a permanent revolving magnet. The method utilizes magnetic forces and the hydrodynamic features of stretched threads to produce highly loaded, fine magnetic nanofibers. The magnetospinning process is independent of the solution dielectric properties and requires no high voltages, in contrast to the more-traditional electrospinning technique.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Touch‐ and Brush‐Spinning of Nanofibers

Alexander Tokarev; Darya Asheghali; Ian Griffiths; Oleksandr Trotsenko; Alexey Gruzd; Xin Lin; Howard A. Stone; Sergiy Minko

Robust, simple, and scalable touch- and brush-spinning methods for the drawing of nanofibers, core-shell nanofibers, and their aligned 2D and 3D meshes using polymer solutions and melts are discussed.


Soft Matter | 2014

Sharpening the surface of magnetic paranematic droplets

Alexander Tokarev; Wah-Keat Lee; Igor Sevonkaev; Dan V. Goia; Konstantin G. Kornev

In a non-uniform magnetic field, the droplets of colloids of nickel nanorods and nanobeads aggregate to form a cusp at the droplet surface not deforming the entire droplet shape. When the field is removed, nanorods diffuse away and the cusp disappears. Spherical particles can form cusps in a similar way, but they stay aggregated after the release of the field; finally, the aggregates settle down to the bottom of the drop. The X-ray phase contrast imaging reveals that nanorods in the cusps stay parallel to each other without visible spatial order of their centers of mass. The formation of cusps can be explained with a model that includes magnetostatic and surface tension forces. The discovered possibility of controlled assembly and quenching of nanorod orientation under the cusped liquid surface offers vast opportunities for alignment of carbon nanotubes, nanowires and nanoscrolls, prior to spinning them into superstrong and multifunctional fibers. Magnetostatic and electrostatic analogies suggest that a similar ideal alignment can be achieved with the rod-like dipoles subject to a strong electric field.

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Yu Gu

Nanjing University of Science and Technology

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Andriy Voronov

North Dakota State University

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Olena Kudina

North Dakota State University

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