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Dive into the research topics where Martin J. Hollamby is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin J. Hollamby.


Nature Communications | 2013

Nonvolatile liquid anthracenes for facile full-colour luminescence tuning at single blue-light excitation.

Sukumaran Santhosh Babu; Martin J. Hollamby; Junko Aimi; Hiroaki Ozawa; Akinori Saeki; Shu Seki; Kenji Kobayashi; Keita Hagiwara; Michito Yoshizawa; Helmuth Möhwald; Takashi Nakanishi

Nonvolatile room-temperature luminescent molecular liquids are a new generation of organic soft materials. They possess high stability, versatile optical properties, solvent-free fluid behaviour and can effectively accommodate dopant dye molecules. Here we introduce an approach to optimize anthracene-based liquid materials, focussing on enhanced stability, fluorescence quantum yield, colour tunability and processability, with a view to flexible electronic applications. Enveloping the anthracene core in low-viscosity branched aliphatic chains results in stable, nonvolatile, emissive liquid materials. Up to 96% efficient energy-transfer-assisted tunable emission is achieved by doping a minute amount of acceptor dye in the solvent-free state. Furthermore, we use a thermoresponsive dopant to impart thermally controllable luminescence colours. The introduced strategy leading to diverse luminescence colours at a single blue-light excitation can be an innovative replacement for currently used luminescent materials, providing useful continuous emissive layers in developing foldable devices.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Tri‐Chain Hydrocarbon Surfactants as Designed Micellar Modifiers for Supercritical CO2

Martin J. Hollamby; Kieran Trickett; Azmi Mohamed; Stephen Cummings; Rico F. Tabor; Olesya Myakonkaya; Sarah Gold; Sarah E. Rogers; Richard K. Heenan; Julian Eastoe

Getting their feet wet: Low-cost hydrocarbon surfactants act as fluid modifiers for supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO(2)). Increased terminal branching of the surfactant chains aids micelle formation (see middle picture: CO(2) green), and more chains allows water to be incorporated (right, blue).


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Directed assembly of optoelectronically active alkyl–π-conjugated molecules by adding n-alkanes or π-conjugated species

Martin J. Hollamby; Maciej Karny; Paul H. H. Bomans; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk; Akinori Saeki; Shu Seki; Hiroyuki Minamikawa; Isabelle Grillo; Brian R. Pauw; Paul Brown; Julian Eastoe; Helmuth Möhwald; Takashi Nakanishi

Supramolecular assembly can yield ordered structures by taking advantage of the cumulative effect of multiple non-covalent interactions between adjacent molecules. The thermodynamic origin of many self-assembled structures in water is the balance between the hydrophilic and hydrophobic segments of the molecule. Here, we show that this approach can be generalized to use solvophobic and solvophilic segments of fully hydrophobic alkylated fullerene molecules. Addition of n-alkanes results in their assembly--due to the antipathy of C60 towards n-alkanes--into micelles and hexagonally packed gel-fibres containing insulated C60 nanowires. The addition of pristine C60 instead directs the assembly into lamellar mesophases by increasing the proportion of π-conjugated material in the mixture. The assembled structures contain a large fraction of optoelectronically active material and exhibit comparably high photoconductivities. This method is shown to be applicable to several alkyl-π-conjugated molecules, and can be used to construct organized functional materials with π-conjugated sections.


Langmuir | 2008

Effect of solvent quality on aggregate structures of common surfactants

Martin J. Hollamby; Rico F. Tabor; Kevin J. Mutch; Kieran Trickett; Julian Eastoe; Richard K. Heenan; Isabelle Grillo

Aggregate structures of two model surfactants, AOT and C12E5 are studied in pure solvents D2O, dioxane-d8 (d-diox) and cyclohexane-d12 (C6D12) as well as in formulated D2O/d-diox and d-diox/C6D12 mixtures. As such these solvents and mixtures span a wide and continuous range of polarities. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) has been employed to follow an evolution of the preferred aggregate curvature, from normal micelles in high polarity solvents, through to reversed micelles in low polarity media. SANS has also been used to elucidate the micellar size, shape as well as to highlight intermicellar interactions. The results shed new light on the nature of aggregation structures in intermediate polarity solvents, and point to a region of solvent quality (as characterized by Hildebrand Solubility Parameter, Snyder polarity parameter or dielectric constant) in which aggregation is not favored. Finally these observed trends in aggregation as a function of solvent quality are successfully used to predict the self-assembly behavior of C12E5 in a different solvent, hexane-d14 (C6D14).


Advanced Materials | 2011

Hybrid polyester coating incorporating functionalized mesoporous carriers for the holistic protection of steel surfaces.

Martin J. Hollamby; Dmitri Fix; Ingo Dönch; Dimitriya Borisova; Helmuth Möhwald; Dmitry G. Shchukin

Given the well-documented global corrosion challenge, [ 1 ] the development of universal coating systems for metals that provide both passive and active protection is desirable. The active part of such systems typically consists of either polymer precursors [ 2 , 3 ] or effi cient corrosion inhibitors contained inside small capsules disseminated throughout the coating. [ 4–9 ] In both cases, coating rupture and the onset of corrosion trigger a release of the active molecules, which can either physically repair the passive coating [ 2 , 3 ] or form a thin impermeable fi lm over the exposed metal surface. [ 4–9 ] Previous work in our group has focused on the use of corrosion inhibitors; the technology is well-established for aluminium surfaces and typically employs a hybrid sol-gel fi lm as the coating matrix. [ 8–10 ] However, despite some effort, no similarly effective system has been found for steel. [ 4 , 11 ] When applied to steel the same sol-gel fi lm tends to form a noticeably permeable coating that is highly susceptible to corrosive attack. [ 4 ] To improve the passive and active protection of steel, the coating matrix should be nonporous with excellent adhesion and incorporate well-dispersed capsules containing a suitable inhibitor in suffi cient quantity. Dense polymer-based coatings are a good option for the passive layer; those incorporating inhibitor directly [ 12 , 13 ] or inside capsules [ 5–7 ]


Langmuir | 2010

Rod-like micelles thicken CO2

Kieran Trickett; Dazun Xing; Robert M. Enick; Julian Eastoe; Martin J. Hollamby; Kevin J. Mutch; Sarah E. Rogers; Richard K. Heenan; David C. Steytler

A new approach to thicken dense liquid CO(2) is described using the principles of self-assembly of custom-made CO(2) compatible fluorinated dichain surfactants. Solutions of surfactants in CO(2) have been investigated by high-pressure phase behavior, small-angle neutron scattering (HP-SANS) and falling cylinder viscosity experiments. The results show that it is possible to control surfactant aggregation to generate long, thin reversed micellar rods in dense CO(2), which at 10 wt % can lead to viscosity enhancements of up to 90% compared to pure CO(2). This represents the first example of CO(2) viscosity modifiers based on anisotropic reversed micelles.


Langmuir | 2012

Hybrid CO2-philic surfactants with low fluorine content.

Azmi Mohamed; Masanobu Sagisaka; Martin J. Hollamby; Sarah E. Rogers; Richard K. Heenan; Robert Dyer; Julian Eastoe

The relationships between molecular architecture, aggregation, and interfacial activity of a new class of CO(2)-philic hybrid surfactants are investigated. The new hybrid surfactant CF2/AOT4 [sodium (4H,4H,5H,5H,5H-pentafluoropentyl-3,5,5-trimethyl-1-hexyl)-2-sulfosuccinate] was synthesized, having one hydrocarbon chain and one separate fluorocarbon chain. This hybrid H-F chain structure strikes a fine balance of properties, on one hand minimizing the fluorine content, while on the other maintaining a sufficient level of CO(2)-philicity. The surfactant has been investigated by a range of techniques including high-pressure phase behavior, UV-visible spectroscopy, small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), and air-water (a/w) surface tension measurements. The results advance the understanding of structure-function relationships for generating CO(2)-philic surfactants and are therefore beneficial for expanding applications of CO(2) to realize its potential using the most economic and efficient surfactants.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

Doped-carbon electrocatalysts with trimodal porosity from a homogeneous polypeptide gel

Zoe Schnepp; Yuanjian Zhang; Martin J. Hollamby; Brian R. Pauw; Masahiko Tanaka; Yoshitaka Matsushita; Yoshio Sakka

One of the biggest challenges for materials science is to design facile routes to structurally complex materials, which is particularly important for global applications such as fuel cells. Doped nanostructured carbons are targeted as noble metal-free electrocatalysts for this purpose. Their intended widespread use, however, necessitates simple and robust preparation methods that do not compromise on material performance. Here, we demonstrate a versatile one-pot synthesis of nitrogen-doped carbons that exploits the templating ability of biological polymers. Starting with just metal nitrates and gelatin, multiphase C/Fe3C/MgO nanomaterials are formed, which are then etched to produce active carbon electrocatalysts with accessible trimodal porosity. These show remarkable performance in the oxygen reduction reaction – a key process in proton exchange membrane fuel cells. The activity is comparable to commercial platinum catalysts and shows improved stability with reduced crossover effects. This simple method offers a new route to widely applicable porous multicomponent nanocomposites.


Langmuir | 2010

Separation and Purification of Nanoparticles in a Single Step

Martin J. Hollamby; Julian Eastoe; Angela Chemelli; Otto Glatter; Sarah E. Rogers; Richard K. Heenan; Isabelle Grillo

Reversed-micelle synthesis has been used to generate CTAB-stabilized gold (Au-NPs) and silver nanoparticles (Ag-NPs). By inducing a phase transition and subsequent separation of the background supporting microemulsion, it has been possible to extract and purify the NPs from the reaction medium. After addition of excess water, the NPs concentrate into an upper octane-rich phase, with impurities and reaction debris (in particular CTAB) partitioning into the water-rich lower phase. UV and (1)H NMR showed that 82% of the original mass of Au-NPs can be purified from the excess CTAB and other salt impurities. The concentrated and purified NPs can be dried down, by solvent removal, and then redispersed in octane. Using the complementary techniques small-angle neutron and X-ray scattering (SANS and SAXS), the structures of microemulsions both with and without nanoparticles prior to separation, and in both upper and lower phases after separation, have been elucidated. The approach has also been applied to the synthesis and recovery of silver nanoparticles, but on a larger scale. This new approach compares favorably with existing methods as it uses no additional organic solvents, has a low-energy demand, and requires no specialist surfactants. The new advance here is that by using a colloidal system to prepare and support the nanoparticles as a structured solvent, a simple soft purification method becomes accessible, which is otherwise impossible with a normal molecular solvent.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2013

The power of branched chains: optimising functional molecular materials

Martin J. Hollamby; Takashi Nakanishi

The power of branched alkyl substituents to alter material properties is known to soft matter chemistry, with examples found in both surfactants and ionic liquids. Here, we highlight their potency in organic molecular/polymeric materials with optoelectronic applications. Attaching branched alkyl chains to the active π-conjugated core modulates core–core interactions and thus softens the material. This can lead to optimised assemblies with improved optoelectronic properties. By increasing the number and volume of the flexible chains, individual cores can be isolated, yielding functional organic liquids with bulk optical properties the same as the intrinsic molecular characteristics obtained for their dilute solutions. These liquid materials can accommodate dopants to offer diverse and tuneable emission colours, and provide an easily applicable flexible and foldable continuous layer for future optoelectronic media.

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Sarah E. Rogers

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Richard K. Heenan

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Zoe Schnepp

University of Birmingham

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Isabelle Grillo

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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