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Dive into the research topics where Vivian Merk is active.

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Featured researches published by Vivian Merk.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Hybrid Wood Materials with Magnetic Anisotropy Dictated by the Hierarchical Cell Structure

Vivian Merk; Munish Chanana; Notburga Gierlinger; Ann M. Hirt; Ingo Burgert

Anisotropic and hierarchical structures are bound in nature and highly desired in engineered materials, due to their outstanding functions and performance. Mimicking such natural features with synthetic materials and methods has been a highly active area of research in the last decades. Unlike these methods, we use the native biomaterial wood, with its intrinsic anisotropy and hierarchy as a directional scaffold for the incorporation of magnetic nanoparticles inside the wood material. Nanocrystalline iron oxide particles were synthesized in situ via coprecipitation of ferric and ferrous ions within the interconnected pore network of bulk wood. Imaging with low-vacuum and cryogenic electron microscopy as well as spectral Raman mapping revealed layered nanosize particles firmly attached to the inner surface of the wood cell walls. The mineralogy of iron oxide was identified by XRD powder diffraction and Raman spectroscopy as a mixture of the spinel phases magnetite and maghemite. The intrinsic structural architecture of native wood entails a three-dimensional assembly of the colloidal iron oxide which results in direction-dependent magnetic features of the wood-mineral hybrid material. This superinduced magnetic anisotropy, as quantified by direction-dependent magnetic hysteresis loops and low-field susceptibility tensors, allows for directional lift, drag, alignment, (re)orientation, and actuation, and opens up novel applications of the natural resource wood.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2015

A versatile strategy for grafting polymers to wood cell walls.

Tobias Keplinger; Etienne Cabane; Munish Chanana; Philipp Hass; Vivian Merk; Notburga Gierlinger; Ingo Burgert

The hierarchical structure of wood is composed of a cellulose skeleton of high structural order at various length scales. At the nanoscale and microscale the specific structural features of the cells and cell walls result in a lightweight structure with an anisotropic material profile of excellent mechanical performance. By being able to specifically functionalize wood at the level of cell and cell walls one can insert new properties and inevitably upscale them along the intrinsic hierarchical structure, to a level of large-scale engineering materials applications. For this purpose, however, precise control of the spatial distribution of the modifying substances in the complex wood structure is needed. Here we demonstrate a method to insert methacryl groups into wood cell walls using two different chemistry routes. By using these methacryl groups as the anchor points for grafting, various polymers can be inserted into the wood structure. Strikingly, depending on the methacryl precursor, the spatial distribution of the polymer differs strongly. As a proof of concept we grafted polystyrene as a model compound in the second modification step. In the case of methacryloyl chloride the polymer was located mainly at the interface between the cell lumina and the cell wall covering the inner surface of the cells and being traceable up to 2-3 μm in the cell wall, whereas in the case of methacrylic anhydride the polymer was located inside the whole cell wall. Scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and especially Raman spectroscopy were used for an in-depth analysis of the modified wood at the cell wall level.


Green Chemistry | 2015

Hybrid wood materials with improved fire retardance by bio-inspired mineralisation on the nano- and submicron level

Vivian Merk; Munish Chanana; Tobias Keplinger; Sabyasachi Gaan; Ingo Burgert

Inspired by natural matrix-mediated biomineralisation, we present an artificial calcification approach for wood, which predominately targets the hardly accessible nanoporous cell wall structure rather than the micron-sized void system of the cell lumina. CaCO3 can be deposited with this method deep inside the wood structure. Mineralisation of the wood cell wall architecture with CaCO3 offers a green alternative to conventional fire-retardant systems.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Functional lignocellulosic materials prepared by ATRP from a wood scaffold

Etienne Cabane; Tobias Keplinger; Tina Künniger; Vivian Merk; Ingo Burgert

Wood, a natural and abundant source of organic polymers, has been used as a scaffold to develop novel wood-polymer hybrid materials. Through a two-step surface-initiated Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization (ATRP), the porous wood structure can be effectively modified with polymer chains of various nature. In the present study, polystyrene and poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) were used. As shown with various characterization techniques including confocal Raman microscopy, FTIR, and SEM/EDX, the native wood ultrastructure and features are retained and the polymer chains can be introduced deep within the wood, i.e. inside the wood cell walls. The physical properties of the new materials have been studied, and results indicate that the insertion of polymer chains inside the wood cell wall alters the intrinsic properties of wood to yield a hybrid composite material with new functionalities. This approach to the functionalization of wood could lead to the fabrication of a new class of interesting functional materials and promote innovative utilizations of the renewable resource wood.


Holzforschung | 2016

Mineralization of wood by calcium carbonate insertion for improved flame retardancy

Vivian Merk; Munish Chanana; Sabyasachi Gaan; Ingo Burgert

Abstract Wood can be considered as a highly porous, three-dimensional organic scaffold. It can be mineralized to create hierarchically structured organic-inorganic hybrid materials with novel properties. In the present paper, the precipitation of CaCO3 mineral in Norway spruce and European beech wood has been studied by alternating impregnation with aqueous and alcoholic electrolyte solutions. Microstructural imaging by SEM and confocal Raman microscopy shows the distribution of calcite and vaterite as two CaCO3 polymorphs, which are deposited deep inside the cellular structure of the wood. The confined microenvironment of the wood cell wall seems to favor a formation of vaterite, as visible by XRD and Raman spectroscopy. In view of a practical application, the mineralization of wood opens up ways for sustainable wood-based hybrid materials with a significantly improved fire resistance, as proven via pyrolysis combustion flow calorimetry and cone calorimetry tests. Beyond that, this versatile solute-exchange approach provides an opportunity for the incorporation of a broad range of different mineral phases into wood for novel material property combinations.


Secondary Xylem Biology: Origins, Functions, and Applications | 2016

Biomaterial Wood: Wood-Based and Bioinspired Materials

Ingo Burgert; Tobias Keplinger; Etienne Cabane; Vivian Merk; Markus Rüggeberg

In view of the aimed transition toward sustainable societies, wood has a great future potential in being a renewable and carbon-storing resource, as well as due to its peculiar structural multiscale features and excellent properties. A useful approach for developing wood or wood-based materials with improved properties or new functionalities is to combine bioinspired materials science and wood materials research. For this, recent developments in polymer chemistry and nanotechnology can be used to transfer and apply the basic principles and mechanisms from nature for the fabrication of hybrid wood materials. In this chapter, we review the recent developments in the field and provide examples of our own work on wood materials synthesis and characterization, which illustrate the general concept and its future potential.


Green Chemistry | 2017

A straightforward thiol–ene click reaction to modify lignocellulosic scaffolds in water

Sanja Kostić; John K. Berg; Kirstin Casdorff; Vivian Merk; Ingo Burgert; Etienne Cabane

We report on a sustainable and straightfoward approach to develop a hydrophobic layer on the surface of wood veneers via the Michael addition click reaction of alkanethiols. After treatment, the naturally hygroscopic wood scaffold shows superhydrophobic properties with contact angles above 150°.


Chemsuschem | 2014

Renewable and functional wood materials by grafting polymerization within cell walls.

Etienne Cabane; Tobias Keplinger; Vivian Merk; Philipp Hass; Ingo Burgert


Crystal Growth & Design | 2017

Oriented Crystallization of Barium Sulfate Confined in Hierarchical Cellular Structures

Vivian Merk; John K. Berg; Christina Krywka; Ingo Burgert


Journal of Materials Science | 2018

Chemical, water vapour sorption and ultrastructural analysis of Scots pine wood thermally modified in high-pressure reactor under saturated steam

Maija Kymäläinen; Selim Ben Mlouka; Tiina Belt; Vivian Merk; Ville Liljeström; Tuomas Hänninen; Tuuli Uimonen; Mauri A. Kostiainen; Lauri Rautkari

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Ingo Burgert

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Tobias Keplinger

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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John K. Berg

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Sabyasachi Gaan

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Sanja Kostić

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Kirstin Casdorff

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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