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Dive into the research topics where Emily S. Herman is active.

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Featured researches published by Emily S. Herman.


Nature Materials | 2014

Ultrasoft microgels displaying emergent platelet-like behaviours

Ashley C. Brown; Sarah E. Stabenfeldt; Byungwook Ahn; Riley T. Hannan; Kabir S. Dhada; Emily S. Herman; Victoria Stefanelli; Nina A. Guzzetta; Alexander Alexeev; Wilbur A. Lam; L. Andrew Lyon; Thomas H. Barker

Efforts to create platelet-like structures for the augmentation of haemostasis have focused solely on recapitulating aspects of platelet adhesion; more complex platelet behaviours such as clot contraction are assumed to be inaccessible to synthetic systems. Here, we report the creation of fully synthetic platelet-like particles (PLPs) that augment clotting in vitro under physiological flow conditions and achieve wound-triggered haemostasis and decreased bleeding times in vivo in a traumatic injury model. PLPs were synthesized by combining highly deformable microgel particles with molecular-recognition motifs identified through directed evolution. In vitro and in silico analyses demonstrate that PLPs actively collapse fibrin networks, an emergent behaviour that mimics in vivo clot contraction. Mechanistically, clot collapse is intimately linked to the unique deformability and affinity of PLPs for fibrin fibres, as evidenced by dissipative particle dynamics simulations. Our findings should inform the future design of a broader class of dynamic, biosynthetic composite materials.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Network deconstruction reveals network structure in responsive microgels.

Michael H. Smith; Emily S. Herman; L. Andrew Lyon

Detailed characterization of hydrogel particle erosion revealed critical physicochemical differences between spheres, where network decomposition was informative of network structure. Real-time, in situ monitoring of the triggered erosion of colloidal hydrogels (microgels) was performed via multiangle light scattering. The solution-average molar mass and root-mean-square radii of eroding particles were measured as a function of time for microgels prepared from N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAm) or N-isopropylmethacrylamide (NIPMAm), copolymerized with a chemically labile cross-linker (1,2-dihydroxylethylene)bisacrylamide (DHEA). Precipitation polymerization was employed to yield particles of comparable dimensions but with distinct topological features. Heterogeneous cross-linker incorporation resulted in a heterogeneous network structure for pNIPAm microgels. During the erosion reaction, mass loss proceeded from the exterior toward the interior of the polymer. In contrast, pNIPMAm microgels had a more homogeneous network structure, which resulted in a more uniform mass loss throughout the particle during erosion. Although both particle types degraded into low molar mass products, pNIPAm microgels were incapable of complete dissolution due to the presence of nondegradable cross-links arising from chain transfer and branching during particle synthesis. The observations described herein provide insight into key design parameters associated with the synthesis of degradable hydrogel particles, which may be of use in various biotechnological applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

The role of ions in the self-healing behavior of soft particle suspensions

Andrea Scotti; Urs Gasser; Emily S. Herman; Miguel Pelaez-Fernandez; Jun Han; Andreas Menzel; L. Andrew Lyon; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves

Significance Understanding when a material crystallizes is of fundamental importance in condensed matter. In many materials, the presence of point defects suppresses crystallization. Surprisingly, colloidal hydrogels can overcome this limitation: A small number of large microgels can spontaneously deswell to fit in the crystal lattice of smaller microgels, thus avoiding the occurrence of point defects. We find that this unique particle deswelling is due to an osmotic pressure difference between the inside and the outside of the microgels resulting from the overlap of counterion clouds of neighboring particles. When this pressure difference exceeds the bulk modulus of the large microgels, these shrink, enabling crystallization without point defects. Impurities in crystals generally cause point defects and can even suppress crystallization. This general rule, however, does not apply to colloidal crystals formed by soft microgel particles [Iyer ASJ, Lyon LA (2009) Angew Chem Int Ed 48:4562–4566], as, in this case, the larger particles are able to shrink and join the crystal formed by a majority of smaller particles. Using small-angle X-ray scattering, we find the limit in large-particle concentration for this spontaneous deswelling to persist. We rationalize our data in the context of those counterions that are bound to the microgel particles as a result of the electrostatic attraction exerted by the fixed charges residing on the particle periphery. These bound counterions do not contribute to the suspension osmotic pressure in dilute conditions, as they can be seen as internal degrees of freedom associated with each microgel particle. In contrast, at sufficiently high particle concentrations, the counterion cloud of each particle overlaps with that of its neighbors, allowing these ions to freely explore the space outside the particles. We confirm this scenario by directly measuring the osmotic pressure of the suspension. Because these counterions are then no longer bound, they create an osmotic pressure difference between the inside and outside of the microgels, which, if larger than the microgel bulk modulus, can cause deswelling, explaining why large, soft microgel particles feel the squeeze when suspended with a majority of smaller particles. We perform small-angle neutron scattering measurements to further confirm this remarkable behavior.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Form factor of pNIPAM microgels in overpacked states

Urs Gasser; John S. Hyatt; Emily S. Herman; L. A. Lyon; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves

We study the form factor of thermoresponsive microgels based on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) at high generalized volume fractions, ζ, where the particles must shrink or interpenetrate to fit into the available space. Small-angle neutron scattering with contrast matching techniques is used to determine the particle form factor. We find that the particle size is constant up to a volume fraction roughly between random close packing and space filling. Beyond this point, the particle size decreases with increasing particle concentration; this decrease is found to occur with little interpenetration. Noteworthily, the suspensions remain liquid-like for ζ larger than 1, emphasizing the importance of particle softness in determining suspension behavior.


Physical Review E | 2017

Phase Behavior of Binary and Polydisperse Suspensions of Compressible Microgels Controlled by Selective Particle Deswelling

Andrea Scotti; Emily S. Herman; Andreas Menzel; Urs Gasser; Jun Han; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves; L. A. Lyon

We investigate the phase behavior of suspensions of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAM) microgels with either bimodal or polydisperse size distribution. We observe a shift of the fluid-crystal transition to higher concentrations depending on the polydispersity or the fraction of large particles in suspension. Crystallization is observed up to polydispersities as high as 18.5%, and up to a number fraction of large particles of 29% in bidisperse suspensions. The crystal structure is random hexagonal close-packed as in monodisperse pNIPAM microgel suspensions. We explain our experimental results by considering the effect of bound counterions. Above a critical particle concentration, these cause deswelling of the largest microgels, which are the softest, changing the size distribution of the suspension and enabling crystal formation in conditions where incompressible particles would not crystallize.


Soft Matter | 2015

Ultrasoft, highly deformable microgels

Haylee Bachman; Ashley C. Brown; Kimberly C. Clarke; Kabir S. Dhada; Alison M. Douglas; Caroline E. Hansen; Emily S. Herman; John S. Hyatt; Purva Kodlekere; Zhiyong Meng; Shalini Saxena; Mark W. Spears; Nicole Welsch; L. Andrew Lyon


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

The CONTIN algorithm and its application to determine the size distribution of microgel suspensions

Andrea Scotti; W. Liu; John S. Hyatt; Emily S. Herman; Hong Sung Choi; Jin-Woong Kim; L. A. Lyon; Urs Gasser; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves


Langmuir | 2014

Dynamic Materials from Microgel Multilayers

Mark W. Spears; Emily S. Herman; Jeffrey C. Gaulding; L. Andrew Lyon


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2013

Development of self-assembling mixed protein micelles with temperature-modulated avidities.

Allyson S.C. Soon; Michael H. Smith; Emily S. Herman; L. Andrew Lyon; Thomas H. Barker


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Phase behavior in polydisperse microgel suspensions controlled by spontaneous particle deswelling

Urs Gasser; Andrea Scotti; Emily S. Herman; L. Andrew Lyon; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves

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L. Andrew Lyon

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Alberto Fernandez-Nieves

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Andrea Scotti

Georgia Institute of Technology

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John S. Hyatt

Georgia Institute of Technology

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L. A. Lyon

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Miguel Pelaez-Fernandez

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Jun Han

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Andreas Menzel

Technical University of Dortmund

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Ashley C. Brown

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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