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Dive into the research topics where Lewis M. Cox is active.

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Featured researches published by Lewis M. Cox.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Morphing Metal–Polymer Janus Particles

Lewis M. Cox; Jason P. Killgore; Zhengwei Li; Zheng Zhang; Donna C. Hurley; Jianliang Xiao; Yifu Ding

The direct deformation and shape recovery of micron-sized polystyrene particles via nanoimprint lithography is reported. The recovery of the programmed PS particles can be utilized to create a range of smart Janus particles with contrasting properties in conductivity and topography, by use of metal-layer constrained recovery.


Langmuir | 2016

Influences of Substrate Adhesion and Particle Size on the Shape Memory Effect of Polystyrene Particles

Lewis M. Cox; Jason P. Killgore; Zhengwei Li; Rong Long; Aric W. Sanders; Jianliang Xiao; Yifu Ding

Formulations and applications of micro- and nanoscale polymer particles have proliferated rapidly in recent years, yet knowledge of their mechanical behavior has not grown accordingly. In this study, we examine the ways that compressive strain, substrate surface energy, and particle size influence the shape memory cycle of polystyrene particles. Using nanoimprint lithography, differently sized particles are programmed into highly deformed, temporary shapes in contact with substrates of differing surface energies. Atomic force microscopy is used to obtain in situ measurements of particle shape recovery kinetics, and scanning electron microscopy is employed to assess differences in the profiles of particles at the conclusion of the shape memory cycle. Finally, finite element models are used to investigate the growing impact of surface energies at smaller length scales. Results reveal that the influence of substrate adhesion on particle recovery is size-dependent and can become dominating at submicron length scales.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Light-Stimulated Permanent Shape Reconfiguration in Cross-Linked Polymer Microparticles

Lewis M. Cox; XiaoHao Sun; Chen Wang; Nancy Sowan; Jason P. Killgore; Rong Long; HengAn Wu; Christopher N. Bowman; Yifu Ding

Reconfiguring the permanent shape of elastomeric microparticles has been impossible due to the incapability of plastic deformation in these materials. To address this limitation, we synthesize the first instance of microparticles comprising a covalent adaptable network (CAN). CANs are cross-linked polymer networks capable of reconfiguring their network topology, enabling stress relaxation and shape changing behaviors, and reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) is the corresponding dynamic chemistry used in this work to enable CAN-based microparticles. Using nanoimprint lithography to apply controllable deformations we demonstrate that upon light stimulation microparticles are able to reconfigure their shape to permanently fix large aspect ratios and nanoscale surface topographies.


Nature Communications | 2018

Bistable and photoswitchable states of matter

Brady T. Worrell; Matthew K. McBride; Gayla Berg Lyon; Lewis M. Cox; Chen Wang; Sudheendran Mavila; Chern-Hooi Lim; Hannah M. Coley; Charles B. Musgrave; Yifu Ding; Christopher N. Bowman

Classical materials readily switch phases (solid to fluid or fluid to gas) upon changes in pressure or heat; however, subsequent reversion of the stimulus returns the material to their original phase. Covalently cross-linked polymer networks, which are solids that do not flow when strained, do not change phase even upon changes in temperature and pressure. However, upon the addition of dynamic cross-links, they become stimuli responsive, capable of switching phase from solid to fluid, but quickly returning to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Reported here is the first material capable of a bistable switching of phase. A permanent solid to fluid transition or vice versa is demonstrated at room temperature, with inherent, spatiotemporal control over this switch in either direction triggered by exposure to light.Polymers cross-linked with dynamic bonds can switch the phase from solid to fluid upon stimulus but return quickly to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Here the authors report a light triggered permanent solid to fluid transition at room temperature with inherent spatiotemporal control in either direction


Science Advances | 2018

A readily programmable, fully reversible shape-switching material

Matthew K. McBride; Alina M. Martinez; Lewis M. Cox; Marvin D. Alim; Kimberly K. Childress; Michael Beiswinger; Maciej Podgórski; Brady T. Worrell; Jason P. Killgore; Christopher N. Bowman

Liquid crystalline elastomers programmed with light-activated bond exchange allowing controlled shape change. Liquid crystalline (LC) elastomers (LCEs) enable large-scale reversible shape changes in polymeric materials; however, they require intensive, irreversible programming approaches in order to facilitate controllable actuation. We have implemented photoinduced dynamic covalent chemistry (DCC) that chemically anneals the LCE toward an applied equilibrium only when and where the light-activated DCC is on. By using light as the stimulus that enables programming, the dynamic bond exchange is orthogonal to LC phase behavior, enabling the LCE to be annealed in any LC phase or in the isotropic phase with various manifestations of this capability explored here. In a photopolymerizable LCE network, we report the synthesis, characterization, and exploitation of readily shape-programmable DCC-functional LCEs to create predictable, complex, and fully reversible shape changes, thus enabling the literal square peg to fit into a round hole.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: Bistable and photoswitchable states of matter

Brady T. Worrell; Matthew K. McBride; Gayla Berg Lyon; Lewis M. Cox; Chen Wang; Sudheendran Mavila; Chern-Hooi Lim; Hannah M. Coley; Charles B. Musgrave; Yifu Ding; Christopher N. Bowman

The original version of this Article contained errors in Fig. 3. In Fig. 3a, the word ‘fluid’ in grey was incorrectly given as ‘solid’ in green, below that, ‘solid’ in green was previously ‘fluid’ in grey. Also, the label on the arrow incorrectly read ‘TMG (1 mol%) HABI-Cl (3 mol%) 455 nm, 1 min’; the correct version reads ‘TMG (1 mol%) HABI-O-n-oct (4 mol%) 455 nm, 4 min’. In the accompanying legend, the word ‘photobase’ was originally incorrectly given as ‘photoacid’. Additionally, in Fig. 3b, the label on the central image was ‘As is: solid’, rather than the correct ‘As is: fluid’. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Formation of a Crack-Free, Hybrid Skin Layer with Tunable Surface Topography and Improved Gas Permeation Selectivity on Elastomers Using Gel–Liquid Infiltration Polymerization

Mengyuan Wang; Justin M. Gorham; Jason P. Killgore; Maryam Omidvar; Haiqing Lin; Frank W. DelRio; Lewis M. Cox; Zheng Zhang; Yifu Ding

Surface modifications of elastomers and gels are crucial for emerging applications such as soft robotics and flexible electronics, in large part because they provide a platform to control wettability, adhesion, and permeability. Current surface modification methods via ultraviolet-ozone (UVO) and/or O2 plasma, atomic layer deposition (ALD), plasmas deposition, and chemical treatment impart a dense polymer or inorganic layer on the surface that is brittle and easy to fracture at low strain levels. This paper presents a new method, based on gel-liquid infiltration polymerization, to form hybrid skin layers atop elastomers. The method is unique in that it allows for control of the skin layer topography, with tunable feature sizes and aspect ratios as high as 1.8 without fracture. Unlike previous techniques, the skin layer formed here dramatically improves the barrier properties of the elastomer, while preserving skin layer flexibility. Moreover, the method is versatile and likely applicable to most interfacial polymerization systems and network polymers on flat and patterned surfaces.


Macromolecules | 2013

Measurement of Viscoelastic Loss Tangent with Contact Resonance Modes of Atomic Force Microscopy

Donna C. Hurley; Sara E. Campbell; Jason P. Killgore; Lewis M. Cox; Yifu Ding


Macromolecules | 2016

Remoldable Thiol–Ene Vitrimers for Photopatterning and Nanoimprint Lithography

Gayla Berg Lyon; Lewis M. Cox; J. Taylor Goodrich; Austin Baranek; Yifu Ding; Christopher N. Bowman


Polymer | 2014

Reconfigurable surface patterns on covalent adaptive network polymers using nanoimprint lithography

Lewis M. Cox; Zhengwei Li; Nancy Sowan; Devatha P. Nair; Jianliang Xiao; Christopher N. Bowman; Yifu Ding

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Yifu Ding

University of Colorado Boulder

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Jason P. Killgore

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Christopher N. Bowman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Jianliang Xiao

University of Colorado Boulder

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Zhengwei Li

University of Colorado Boulder

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Brady T. Worrell

University of Colorado Boulder

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Chen Wang

University of Colorado Boulder

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Donna C. Hurley

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Gayla Berg Lyon

University of Colorado Boulder

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Matthew K. McBride

University of Colorado Boulder

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