Author Archives: uzair ahmed

A Greener Approach to Developing Gels

UBC researcher’s serendipitous discovery could influence a greener method in the gel production industry.

Graduate student Lev Lewis of the Department of Chemistry at the University of British Columbia unexpectedly developed a simple method to form gels from cellulose nanocrystals.

First off, let’s break down what a cellulose nanocrystal (CNC) actually is. Cellulose is one of the most, if not the most abundant molecule produced by plants. It is responsible for the strength, structure, and form that allows you to hold a flower up by its stem. Next in order, a nanocrystal is basically a small crystal. Now how small are we talking? A nanocrystal, is a crystal smaller than 200 nanometers. To put this value in perspective, the diameter of a hair is roughly 100,000 nanometers across. In other words, these CNCs that Lev is working with are really really small crystals.

 

Graphic representing the molecular structure of CNCs which is composed of chains of individual cellulose molecules. Image courtesy of yalescientific.org via the Keten lab.

Graphic representing the molecular structure of CNCs which is composed of chains of individual cellulose molecules. Image courtesy of yalescientific.org via the Keten lab.

Lev found that by simply heating a CNC-water mixture under high pressure, this would yield the liquid to thicken into a gel.

Gel made using CNCs under high pressure and high temperature. Picture courtesy of Lev Lewis.

Gel made using CNCs under high pressure and high temperature. Picture courtesy of Lev Lewis.

He attributes this unexpected formation of gel to the desulfation of CNCs (or the removal of sulfur groups) which causes the crystals in the mixture to become unstable, thus forming a gel. The following audio clip describes the process of desulfation using a candy analogy we all can understand.

Constructing gels using this method is an attractive objective because it’s easy, it’s green, and it uses cellulose which is renewable resource. These gels are used in a wide variety of products including diapers, contact lenses, insulation, and tissue scaffolds to list a few. Perhaps one of the most possibly important applications of these gels is in drug delivery. Lev explains that gels could be used to treat cancer instead of the traditional method of chemotherapy. Due to the physical properties of a gel, we could inject them into the cancerous area of the body needing treatment and expect them to stay put. This allows treatment to be localized as opposed to chemotherapy that wreaks havoc on the entire body. The following video elaborates on CNCs and their applications.

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Currently, CNCs can be obtained from wood pulp. Seeing as the world is increasingly making the shift from paper to digital, there’s a lot of wood pulp, which is used to make paper, going to waste. Due to the ease and accessibility of materials of Lev’s method of gel formation, large scale industries that use gels in their products could adopt this method, thus providing an outlet for all the unused wood pulp being produced.

~Lindsey Belsher, Jennifer Jung, Uzair Ahmed

Why Clowns Are So Scary

As far as I remember, it has always been an acceptable and popular choice to dress up as a clown for Halloween.

The same really can’t be said for this year.

The past few months have made the public seriously afraid of clowns. Typically, with a fear like this, people would say that it’s irrational and unfounded. But in this case, I think the fear is fairly justified. There have been numerous reported sightings of ‘creepy clowns’ all over North America and the UK. There have even been some eerie sightings locally, in the Greater Vancouver area.

Of course, part of the public fear is grounded in the fact that these individuals have displayed threatening behaviour. However, the question is, what is it about the sheer idea of a clown that frightens us?

There are several plausible psychological reasons behind why clowns often trigger a fear response in us. In my opinion, the most significant aspect of this phenomenon may be the fact that clown make-up or masks conceal facial expressions. Humans rely on the interpretation of facial expressions to gauge intentions. When this is lost, an individual naturally becomes scary to us, because we can’t tell who they are or what they want.

This leads me to my next point. Clowns are unpredictable. This is meant to be a part of their amusing demeanour–after all, it is the unpredictability of humour that makes us laugh. However, this trait of clowns can also be taken in a negative light, because it can be scary to not know what someone might do.

Both of these psychological reasons have touched on the theme of the human desire to gain familiarity with other individuals. We often find that the more familiar and similar someone is, the more we may like them. We also find the opposite to be true, where we may not feel warmth for people who are different or foreign to us (which is why some North Americans easily reject foreign refugees–but that’s another matter).

This could be another element of our fear of clowns. The clown character is constructed to be very different than the average person, with the goal of amusing people through surprisingly strange and quirky behaviours. However, this difference from human norm can be so large that it makes people entirely unable to relate to clowns, thus making them scary.

It appears that these psychological ideas are something that filmmakers have long understood. There have been many movies where the villain is a clown. The success of these movies often partially relies on the ability of the portrayed villain to scare the audience.

With all that being said, there are some really nice people in the clown profession.

It is unfortunate that their professions may be harmed because of the spread of this fear. However, this phenomenon poses intriguing questions about the line between what we find amusing and scary.

Uzair Ahmed