Product category:
Particle size analysis equipment
News Release from: Malvern Instruments | Subject: Bohlin Gemini HR Nano rheometer
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial
Team on 08 June 2007
Rheometer aids in search for the perfect
silk
Using a Bohlin Gemini HR Nano rheometer from Malvern, researchers took unspun natural silk dope and compared it to artificial silk dope under shear forces similar to those in a natural spinning duct
In work published in the journal Polymer (June 2007) Oxford researchers have taken an important step towards understanding why it has been impossible to artificially spin protein fibres with the superb material properties of their natural models, the silks of spiders and silkworms The researchers were led by Chris Holland and Professor Fritz Vollrath, together with Ann Terry and David Porter
This article was originally published on Laboratorytalk on 22 Nov 2006 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Malvern co-sponsors BSR annual meeting
Malvern Instruments will exhibit the recently introduced Bohlin Gemini HR nano rheometer at the 2006 British Society of Rheology (BSR) annual meeting (11-12 December 2006, Manchester, UK)
Contributing to drug carrier research
Nanoparticle characterisation using the Zetasizer Nano from Malvern Instruments is providing essential information for researchers working on drug delivery systems at UK's newest school of pharmacy
Melbourn is first UK CRO to routinely use Spraytec
Melbourn Scientific has become the first CRO in the UK to routinely use the Malvern Instruments Spraytec particle size analyser to support the development of inhaler, nebuliser and nasal spray systems
Optimised for the control of ultra-low torques, the Gemini HR nano is ideal for probing sensitive material structures and allowing measurement of low volume samples.
The research group discovered fundamental differences in kind, not just in degree, between the natural and artificial silk dopes.
This research builds on previous work by the Oxford group, which demonstrated that the flow characteristics of native spider and silkworm dopes are very similar despite the independent evolution of the two silks.
Such convergence of the two distinct materials towards an identical flow behaviour strongly suggests that dope rheology is a key to the production of high-performance protein fibres.
Native silk dope taken straight from the gland can easily be drawn into strong fibres, but the fibres from artificial dope cannot be spun into any type of serious filament without unnatural treatment using strong chemicals.
Clearly, native silk dopes have the innate ability to form into a fibre, which is lost in translation when attempting to create artificial silk dope.
Discovering the mechanisms behind this seemingly effortless process will be a crucial step towards the biomimetic spinning of artificial silk fibres using the animal's own technology. Request a free brochure from Malvern Instruments ...
• Malvern Instruments: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Laboratorytalk email newsletter
• Laboratorytalk Home Page


