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Dive into the research topics where Jitendra P. Mata is active.

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Featured researches published by Jitendra P. Mata.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2008

Effect of phenol on the aggregation characteristics of an ethylene oxide-propylene oxide triblock copolymer P65 in aqueous solution

Jitendra P. Mata; P.R. Majhi; O. Kubota; A. Khanal; Kenichi Nakashima; Pratap Bahadur

The effects of phenol on the micellization, micellar growth, and phase separation of a poly(ethylene oxide)-block-poly(propylene oxide)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO-PPO-PEO) amphiphilic copolymer (Pluronic P65: EO19 PO30 EO19) in aqueous solution have been studied by cloud point, viscosity, dynamic light scattering (DLS), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), fluorescence spectroscopy, and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Various concentrations of P65 have been chosen to estimate the effect of phenol on different concentration regions of P65. Phenol interacts quite differently at low concentrations (0-2%) than at high concentrations (2-10%) of P65, as per the observation that phenol is more predominant at smaller concentrations of P65. A marked decrease in the cloud points of the P65 solutions is observed in presence of phenol. The critical micelle temperature (CMT) of P65 shows a synergistic effect of phenol on P65 aggregates. Micellar transitions, phase separation, and aggregation behaviours like micellization and micellar growth in the presence of phenol have been observed by combining viscometry, DLS, DSC, and CP. DLS shows that the effect of phenol is predominant at high temperatures. SANS shows a high increase in axial ratio and aggregation numbers in the presence of phenol at fixed concentrations of P65. Fluorescence data illustrate that addition of phenol makes micelles polar but at the same time its favours aggregation. Water-soluble phenol (present in low concentrations) forms aggregates with P65, which can be separated by cloud point extraction, making this study interesting for separation of phenol from the phenol-water system.


Journal of Dispersion Science and Technology | 2008

The Effects of Salts and Ionic Surfactants on the Micellar Structure of Tri‐Block Copolymer PEO‐PPO‐PEO in Aqueous Solution

Bhavesh Bharatiya; Goutam Ghosh; Pratap Bahadur; Jitendra P. Mata

The micelles of two poly(ethylene oxide)‐poly(propylene oxide)‐poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO‐PPO‐PEO) block copolymers, P123 and F127 (same mol wt of PPO but different % PEO) in aqueous solution in the absence and presence of salts as well as ionic surfactants were mainly examined by dynamic light scattering (DLS). The study is further supported by cloud point and viscosity measurements. The change in cloud point (CP), as well as the size of micelles in aqueous solution in presence of salts obeys the Hofmeister lyotropic series. Addition of both cationic cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) and anionic sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) surfactants in the aqueous solution of P123 show initial decrease of micellar size from 20 nm to nearly 7 nm and then increasing with a double relaxation mode, further in the presence of NaCl this double relaxation mode vanishes. The effect of surfactant on F127, which has much bigger hydrophilic part is different than P123 and have no double relaxation. The relaxation time distributions is obtained using the Laplace inversion routine REPES. Two relaxation modes for P123 are explained on the bases of Pluronic rich mixed micelles containing ionic surfactants and the other smaller, predominantly surfactant rich micelles domains.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Nano- and Microstructure of High-Internal Phase Emulsions Under Shear

Peter N. Yaron; Philip A. Reynolds; Duncan J. McGillivray; Jitendra P. Mata; John W. White

High-internal phase aqueous-in-oil emulsions of two surfactant concentrations were studied using small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and simultaneous in situ rheology measurements. They contained a continuous oil phase with differing amounts of hexadecane and d-hexadecane (for contrast matching experiments), a deuteroaqueous phase almost saturated with ammonium nitrate, and an oil-soluble stabilizing polyisobutylene-based surfactant. The emulsions macroscopic rheological behavior has been related to quantify changes in microscale and nanoscale structures observed in the SANS measurements. The emulsions are rheologically unexceptional and show, inter alia, refinement to higher viscosity after high shear, and shear thinning. These are explained by changes observed in the SANS model parameters. Shear thinning is explained by SANS-observed shear disruption of interdroplet bilayer links, causing deflocculation to more spherical, less linked, aqueous droplets. Refinement to higher viscosity is accompanied by droplet size reduction and loss of surfactant from the oil continuous phase. Refinement occurs because of shear-induced droplet anisotropy, which we have also observed in the SANS experiment. This observed anisotropy and the emulsion refinement cannot be reproduced by either isolated molecule or mean-field models but require a more detailed consideration of interdroplet forces in the sheared fluid.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2010

The stability of high internal phase emulsions at low surfactant concentration studied by small angle neutron scattering.

Philip A. Reynolds; Duncan J. McGillivray; Jitendra P. Mata; Peter N. Yaron; John W. White

The changes in structure of high internal phase emulsions at low concentrations and at elevated temperature are reported for comparison with the same emulsions under conditions well away from instability. Small angle neutron scattering measurements on aqueous ammonium nitrate droplets dispersed in hexadecane and stabilized by very small quantities of a polyisobutylene-based surfactant (PIBSA) as well as related inverse micellar solutions in hexadecane, have been made as a function of temperature and surfactant concentration. Experimental conditions here favour larger and more deformable droplets than in previous studies. Besides the expected micelles and adsorbed surfactant, planar bilayers of micron lateral extent between touching droplets cover 20% of the droplet surface. Another difference from previous experiments is that the oil phase in the emulsions, and corresponding inverse micellar solutions are different in micellar radii and composition. The differences, and changes with surfactant concentration and temperature, are attributed to fractionation of the polydisperse PIBSA in the emulsions, but not the inverse micellar solutions. At low PIBSA concentration and high temperature the SANS shows emulsion decomposing into separate oil and aqueous phases. This occurs when the micelle concentration reaches a very small but measurable value. The inverse micelles may suppress by steric action long wavelength unstable capillary waves in the bilayers. Depletion repulsion forces here have a minor role in the emulsion stabilization.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

High Internal Phase Emulsions under Shear. Co-Surfactancy and Shear Stability

Peter N. Yaron; Andrew J. Scott; Philip A. Reynolds; Jitendra P. Mata; John W. White

Large changes in the rheology of high-internal phase aqueous-in-oil emulsions (HIPEs) using an oil-soluble polyisobutylene-based primary surfactant (PIBSA) are provoked by very small quantities of water-soluble polyamide-based cosurfactants (PAM with C(12), C(14), and C(16) tails). The structural origin of this was studied using small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) from sheared emulsions, with simultaneous in situ rheology measurements. The PAM drastically lowers the droplet-oil interfacial tension by displacing PIBSA, causing large droplet deformation under shear and much lowered emulsion yield stress. With PAM, the surfactant monolayer at the droplet surface becomes more responsive to droplet shape change and redistributes in response to shear which the PIBSA-only system does not. Although it is oil-insoluble, PAM also reaches the nanoscale PIBSA micelles in the oil phase, changing micelle size and content in ways predictable from the hydrophilicity of the different PAMs. PAM does not, however, strongly affect the viscosities at high shear rates; shear thinning and thickening are unaffected. Droplet size, droplet-droplet flattening, and linkage determine the viscosities observed, more so than droplet-oil interfacial tension. We infer from this that the droplet motion under shear does not involve much transient droplet deformation as the droplets move by each other.


Food Chemistry | 2016

Molecular interactions of a model bile salt and porcine bile with (1,3:1,4)-β-glucans and arabinoxylans probed by 13C NMR and SAXS

Purnima Gunness; Bernadine M. Flanagan; Jitendra P. Mata; Elliot P. Gilbert; Michael J. Gidley

Two main classes of interaction between soluble dietary fibres (SDFs), such as (1,3:1,4)-β-D-glucan (βG) and arabinoxylan (AX) and bile salt (BS) or diluted porcine bile, were identified by (13)C NMR and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Small chemical shift differences of BS NMR resonances were consistent with effective local concentration or dilution of BS micelles mostly by βG, suggesting dynamic interactions; whilst the reduced line widths/intensities observed were mostly caused by wheat AX and the highest molecular size and concentrations of βG. SAXS showed evidence of changes in βG but not AX in the presence of BS micelles, at >13 nm length scale consistent with molecular level interactions. Thus intermolecular interactions between SDF and BS depend on both SDF source and its molecular weight and may occur alone or in combination.


ACS Omega | 2016

Polymeric Ionic Liquid Nanoparticle Emulsions as a Corrosion Inhibitor in Anticorrosion Coatings

Mona Taghavikish; Surya Subianto; Naba K. Dutta; Liliana de Campo; Jitendra P. Mata; Christine Rehm; Namita Roy Choudhury

In this contribution, we report the facile preparation of cross-linked polymerizable ionic liquid (PIL)-based nanoparticles via thiol–ene photopolymerization in a miniemulsion. The synthesized PIL nanoparticles with a diameter of about 200 nm were fully characterized with regard to their chemical structures, morphologies, and properties using different techniques, such as Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. To gain an in-depth understanding of the physical and morphological structures of the PIL nanoparticles in an emulsion, small-angle neutron scattering and ultra-small-angle neutron scattering were used. Neutron scattering studies revealed valuable information regarding the formation of cylindrical ionic micelles in the spherical nanoparticles, which is a unique property of this system. Furthermore, the PIL nanoparticle emulsion was utilized as an inhibitor in a self-assembled nanophase particle (SNAP) coating. The corrosion protection ability of the resultant coating was examined using potentiodynamic polarization and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The results show that the PIL nanoparticle emulsion in the SNAP coating acts as an inhibitor of corrosion and is promising for fabricating advanced coatings with improved barrier function and corrosion protection.


Journal of Dispersion Science and Technology | 2008

Aggregation Behavior of Pluronic-L64 in Presence of Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate in Water

Jitendra P. Mata; P.R. Majhi; M. Yamashita; A. Khanal; Kenichi Nakashima; Pratap Bahadur

The effect of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) on the micellization and aggregation behavior of a poly(ethylene oxide)-block-poly(propylene oxide)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO-PPO-PEO) amphiphilic copolymer (Pluronic L64: EO13 PO30 EO13) have been investigated by various techniques like, cloud point, viscosity, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), fluorescence spectroscopy, room temperature phosphorescence (RTP), and small angle neutron scattering (SANS). Addition of SDS in L64 solutions shows mark alteration of different properties. We observed synergistic interaction between SDS and Pluronic L64. The changes in the critical micelle concentration (CMC), critical micelle temperature (CMT), cloud point (CP), micelle size, and shape has been correlated and reported in terms of structure dynamics and mechanics. The ITC titrations have been used to explore the different stages of binding and interactions of SDS with L64. The enthalpies of aggregation for copolymer-SDS aggregates binding, organizational change of bound aggregates, and the threshold concentrations of SDS in the presence of copolymer were estimated directly from ITC titration curves. The effect of temperature on enthalpy values has been reported in terms of different aggregation state. Fluorescence and RTP for L64 were used to investigate the change in micellar environment on the addition of SDS at different temperature. Appearance and shifting of SANS peaks have been used to monitor the size and inter micellar interaction on addition of SDS in L64 solution. Cloud point and viscosity elaborate the penetration of SDS molecule in L64 micelle and hence changing the micellar architect.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2018

QUOKKA, the pinhole small-angle neutron scattering instrument at the OPAL Research Reactor, Australia: design, performance, operation and scientific highlights

Kathleen Wood; Jitendra P. Mata; Christopher J. Garvey; Chun-Ming Wu; William A. Hamilton; Peter Abbeywick; Daniel Bartlett; Friedl Bartsch; Peter Baxter; Norman Booth; Warren Brown; Jason Christoforidis; Douglas Clowes; Timothy d'Adam; Frank Darmann; Michael Deura; Shane Harrison; Nick Hauser; Glen Horton; David Federici; Ferdi Franceschini; Philip Hanson; Eno Imamovic; Paolo Imperia; Martin Jones; S.J. Kennedy; Sungjoong Kim; Tony Lam; Wai Tung Lee; Mark Lesha

QUOKKA is a 40u2005m pinhole small-angle neutron scattering instrument in routine user operation at the OPAL research reactor at the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. Operating with a neutron velocity selector enabling variable wavelength, QUOKKA has an adjustable collimation system providing source–sample distances of up to 20u2005m. Following the large-area sample position, a two-dimensional 1u2005m2 position-sensitive detector measures neutrons scattered from the sample over a secondary flight path of up to 20u2005m. Also offering incident beam polarization and analysis capability as well as lens focusing optics, QUOKKA has been designed as a general purpose SANS instrument to conduct research across a broad range of scientific disciplines, from structural biology to magnetism. As it has recently generated its first 100 publications through serving the needs of the domestic and international user communities, it is timely to detail a description of its as-built design, performance and operation as well as its scientific highlights. Scientific examples presented here reflect the Australian context, as do the industrial applications, many combined with innovative and unique sample environments.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016

Effects of Crowding and Environment on the Evolution of Conformational Ensembles of the Multi-Stimuli-Responsive Intrinsically Disordered Protein, Rec1-Resilin: A Small-Angle Scattering Investigation

Rajkamal Balu; Jitendra P. Mata; Robert Knott; Christopher M. Elvin; Anita J. Hill; Namita Roy Choudhury; Naba K. Dutta

In this study, we explore the overall structural ensembles and transitions of a biomimetic, multi-stimuli-responsive, intrinsically disordered protein (IDP), Rec1-resilin. The structural transition of Rec1-resilin with change in molecular crowding and environment is evaluated using small-angle neutron scattering and small-angle X-ray scattering. The quantitative analyses of the experimental scattering data using a combination of computational models allowed comprehensive description of the structural evolution, organization, and conformational ensembles of Rec1-resilin in response to the changes in concentration, pH, and temperature. Rec1-resilin in uncrowded solutions demonstrates the equilibrium intrinsic structure quality of an IDP with radius of gyration Rg ∼ 5 nm, and a scattering function for the triaxial ellipsoidal model best fit the experimental dataset. On crowding (increase in concentration >10 wt %), Rec1-resilin molecules exert intermolecular repulsive force of interaction, the Rg value reduces with a progressive increase in concentration, and molecular chains transform from a Gaussian coil to a fully swollen coil. It is also revealed that the structural organization of Rec1-resilin dynamically transforms from a rod (pH 2) to coil (pH 4.8) and to globular (pH 12) as a function of pH. The findings further support the temperature-triggered dual-phase-transition behavior of Rec1-resilin, exhibiting rod-shaped structural organization below the upper critical solution temperature (∼4 °C) and a large but compact structure above the lower critical solution temperature (∼75 °C). This work attempted to correlate unusual responsiveness of Rec1-resilin to the evolution of conformational ensembles.

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John W. White

Australian National University

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Naba K. Dutta

University of South Australia

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Namita Roy Choudhury

University of South Australia

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Philip A. Reynolds

Australian National University

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Pratap Bahadur

Veer Narmad South Gujarat University

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Ellen M. Moon

Southern Cross University

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Elliot P. Gilbert

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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Peter N. Yaron

Australian National University

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Robert Knott

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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