John W. McAllister
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by John W. McAllister.
Biomacromolecules | 2013
Joseph R. Lott; John W. McAllister; Sara Arvidson; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge
It is well established that aqueous solutions of methylcellulose (MC) can form hydrogels on heating, with the rheological gel point closely correlated to the appearance of optical turbidity. However, the detailed gelation mechanism and the resulting gel structure remain poorly understood. Herein the fibrillar structure of aqueous MC gels was precisely quantified with a powerful combination of (real space) cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) and (reciprocal space) small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) techniques. The cryo-TEM images reveal that MC chains with a molecular weight of 300 000 g/mol associate into fibrils upon heating, with a remarkably uniform diameter of 15 ± 2 nm over a range of concentrations. Vitrified gels also exhibit heterogeneity in the fibril density on the length scale of hundreds of nanometers, consistent with the observed optical turbidity of MC hydrogels. The SANS curves of gels exhibit no characteristic peaks or plateaus over a broad range of wavevector, q, from 0.001-0.2 Å(-1). The major feature is a change in slope from I ∼ q(-1.7) in the intermediate q range (0.001 - 0.01 Å(-1)) to I ∼ q(-4) above q ≈ 0.015 Å(-1). The fibrillar nature of the gel structure was confirmed by fitting the SANS data consistently with a model based on the form factor for flexible cylinders with a polydisperse radius. This model was found to capture the scattering features quantitatively for MC gels varying in concentration from 0.09-1.3 wt %. In agreement with the microscopy results, the flexible cylinder model indicated fibril diameters of 14 ± 1 nm for samples at elevated temperatures. This combination of complementary experimental techniques provides a comprehensive nanoscale depiction of fibrillar morphology for MC gels, which correlates very well with macro-scale rheological behavior and optical turbidity previously observed for such systems.
Macromolecules | 2013
Sara Arvidson; Joseph R. Lott; John W. McAllister; Jiuyang Zhang; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge; Robert L. Sammler; Yongfu Li; Meinolf Brackhagen
Macromolecules | 2013
Joseph R. Lott; John W. McAllister; Matthew J. Wasbrough; Robert L. Sammler; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge
ACS Macro Letters | 2015
John W. McAllister; Joseph R. Lott; Peter W. Schmidt; Robert L. Sammler; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge
Macromolecules | 2015
John W. McAllister; Peter W. Schmidt; Kevin D. Dorfman; Timothy P. Lodge; Frank S. Bates
Biomacromolecules | 2018
Timothy P. Lodge; Amanda Maxwell; Joseph R. Lott; Peter W. Schmidt; John W. McAllister; Svetlana Morozova; Frank S. Bates; Yongfu Li; Robert L. Sammler
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Amanda Maxwell; Peter W. Schmidt; John W. McAllister; Joseph Lott; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
John W. McAllister; Peter W. Schmidt; Timothy P. Lodge; Frank S. Bates
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013
John W. McAllister; Joseph Lott; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012
Joseph Lott; John W. McAllister; Sara Arvidson; Frank S. Bates; Timothy P. Lodge