Decades-old Theory Validated

Researchers have proven the theory by developing a new polymer characterization method for research and industry.

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Materials researchers at UC Santa Barbara validate decades-old Nobel Prize winning theory by developing a simplified lab technique for measuring polymer characteristics using magnets

(UC Santa Barbara –) Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have developed a new and highly efficient way to characterize the structure of polymers at the nanoscale – effectively designing a routine analytical tool that could be used by industries that rely on polymer science to innovate new products, from drug delivery gels to renewable bio-materials.

Professor Omar Saleh and graduate student Andrew Dittmore of the UCSB Materials department have successfully measured the structure and other critical parameters of a long, string-like polymer molecule – polyethylene glycol, or PEG – by stretching it with an instrument called magnetic tweezers.

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