Conference Handbook

31st ECIS Conference of Madrid

2 Welcome

The Local Organizing Committee welcomes all participants to the 31st Conference of the European Colloid and Interface Society. This meeting has become a global event with scientists from 48 countries registered in this conference. We thank you all for coming to ECIS2017.

We hope that this conference will meet your expectations and serve as the previous ones to exchange ideas and discoveries, promote contacts, exchange visits between laboratories, prepare projects, promote networks, and propelled any other issue that arises from your creative minds. In addition to scientists coming from the university, there is also a considerable number of researchers of the colloid industry. We are delighted with this participation and hope that this contact between academia and industry will be valuable and stimulating for both parts.

An indicator of the importance of the meeting is that the majority of scientific journals related to the field of colloids and interfaces are interested in our meeting. Some of them act as sponsors of the conference giving prizes for presentations of young researchers either in oral or poster form. Thus, in addition to the Elsevier and Langmuir awards this year we have new awards sponsored by MDPI-Polymers and Soft Matter.

The field of colloid research has developed into a truly interdisciplinary area where traditional borders between physics, chemistry, biology and chemical engineering disappear. In addition to the classic topics in colloid conferences we have included some more specific ones that in general have obtained quite good response. For example, ECIS2017 includes topic 12 dedicated to “Colloids out of Equilibrium and Active Matter” such as self-organizing biopolymers (e.g., tubulin) and self-propelled colloids (e.g., self propelled particles driven by light, phoretically propelled particles). The 17 communications that have been presented in this topic is a good number to be a first time and augur good future for this field of research indicating the desire of the new generations of scientists to expand the field of colloids.

The location of the conference is the campus of the Complutense University of Madrid. The organizers are very grateful to the Rector of the University and the Dean of the Faculty of Pharmacy for their help. We would also like to thank all the members of the Scientific Committee for their valuable help reviewing the abstracts. The presentation at the conference consist of 8 plenary, 36 keynote, 180 oral talks and approximately 350 posters. It is emphasized that the poster sessions, scheduled during the first three days of the conference (session A Monday and Tuesday, session B Wednesday) are a central part of the meeting. Manuscripts and reports of oral/poster presentations can be submitted either to Colloids and Surfaces A, or to Polymers for peer-review and rapid publication.

We wish you a successful and satisfying conference and a pleasant stay at Complutense University of Madrid.

The 31st ECIS Conference Organizing Committee

3 Organizing and Scientific Committee Organizing Committee

E. Lopez-Cabarcos Complutense University of Madrid (Conference Chair) J. Rubio-Retama Complutense University of Madrid (Conference Co-Chair) M. Laurenti Complutense University of Madrid (Conference Co-Chair) I. Iglesias Peinado Complutense University of Madrid C. Rueda Rodríguez Complutense University of Madrid C. Mijangos Ugarte Institute of Polymer Science and Technology, CSIC M. P. Sevilla Sierra Complutense University of Madrid A. Fernandez Carballido Complutense University of Madrid J. Torrado Duran Complutense University of Madrid A. I. Torres Suarez Complutense University of Madrid R. Hernandez Velasco Institute of Polymer Science and Technology, CSIC J. Toro Mendoza Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Research, Caracas I. Rodriguez Ramirez de Arellano Complutense University of Madrid M. C. Civera Tejuca Complutense University of Madrid R. Herrero Vanrell Complutense University of Madrid A. Fernández Barbero University of Almeria D. Méndez González Complutense University of Madrid N. Díaz Álvarez Complutense University of Madrid

Scientific Committee

A. Fernandez Nieves Georgia Institute of Tecnology, USA A. Shchekin St Petersburg State University, Russia A. Delgado Mora University of Granada, Spain A. Lopez Quintela Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Spain B. Lindman University of Upsala, Sweden D. Berti University of Florence, Italy D. Danino Israel Institut of Technology, Israel D. Langevin Universite Paris-Sud, France E. Sabadini University of Campinas, Brasil E. Leontidis University of Cyprus, Cyprus F. Winnik University of Montreal, Canada 4 Organizing and Scientific Committee

H. J. Butt Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany I. Unal Gazi University, Turkey I. Dékány University of Szeged, Hungary I. Grillo ILL, France J. Forcada Basque Center for Macromolecular Design & Engineeering, Spain J. van Esch Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands J. Esquena Institute of Advanced Chemistry of Catalonia (IQAC), Spain J. Perez Prieto University of Valencia, Spain K. Bohinc University of Ljubljana, Slovenia L. Galantini Universita di Roma La Sapienza, Italy L. Boinovich Frumkin Institute of Physical Chemistry and Electrochem, Rusia M. Lozada Cassou Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México M. Lattuada University of Fribourg, Switzerland M. Graca Miguel University of Coimbra, Portugal M. Menéndez Fernández Instituto de Química Física Rocasolano, Spain M. Haase University of Osnabruck, Germany M. Velazquez Salicio University of Salamanca, Spain M. Comor Vinca Inst. Nuclear Sciences, Serbia M. Stevens Imperial College, United Kingdom P. Kralchevsky Sofia University, Bulgaria P. Warszynski Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland R. Miller Max-Planck Institut fúr Kolloid und Grenzflächenforshung, Germany R. R. Netz Freie Universität Berlin, Germany T. Zemb Institut de Chimie Séparative de Marcoule, France T. Nylander Lund University, Sweden W. Briscoe University of Bristol, UK

5 General Information How to reach the ECIS 2017 Conference Site at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Madrid can be reached from most international and national destinations by airplane landing at “Adolfo Súarez Madrid- Barajas” airport (MAD).

Adolfo Súarez Madrid-Barajas Airport to ECIS Conference Site

Taxi Madrid airport disposes of public taxis distributed over all airport terminals. The price for a taxi ride from the airport to the centre of Madrid is a flat rate of 30€ one-way. The luggage is included for any tariffs that apply.

Metro There is a metro line from the airport to Madrid city: Metro Line 8 Nuevos Ministerios-Aeropuerto T4. The line has two metro stations at the airport: Aeropuerto T1-T2-T3 and Aeropuerto T4 station.

6 General Information

From Nuevos Ministerios to Ciudad Universitaria (conference site) take Line 6 as shown in the following instructions:

From Nuevos Ministerios Station to others destinations, please visit the webpage of www.metromadrid.es/en. MetroMadrid opens at 6.05 a.m. to 1.30 a.m. The route to the airport since the beginning of the Metro Line 8 (Nuevos Ministerios) takes approx. 15 minutes to the T1-T2-T3 metro station (first stop at the airport), and takes 5 minutes more until the second metro station at the airport (the last stop), at the terminal T4. Between metro stations "Aeropuerto T1 T2 T3" and "Aeropuerto T4" there is a metro station called "Barajas". This metro station is in the town Barajas, not in the airport. Urban Buses at Airport Terminal For a list of urban and intercity bus lines arriving to Madrid Barajas airport from Madrid city centre and surroundings, as well as bus lines, leaving from the airport in direction to the city centre, fairgrounds, main transfer stations and, neighboring towns and other provincial capitals visit the webpage of www.aena.es, http://www.aeropuertomadrid- barajas.com, or www.emtmadrid.es. There are bus stops at all terminals, but not all the lines stop at all terminals.

7 General Information The line 203 or Exprés Aeropuerto (Airport express) is the express line connecting the Atocha train station and the airport of Madrid-Barajas. The bus runs 24 hours 365 days a year and the ticket fare is 5€. Atocha bus stop (beginning/end of route) works only in daytime, 6:00 am to 23:30 pm. Overnight, bus stop beginning/end of route is in central Madrid (Cibeles), and the bus is renamed as N27 Exprés Aeropuerto. Runs every 15-20 minuts during daytime (6:00h to 23:30h) and every 35 minuts at overnight (23:30h to 6:00h). Atocha - terminal T1 takes around 30 minutes in normal traffic conditions. Bus stops: Terminal T1 floor 0, Arrivals area. Terminal T1 floor 1, Departures area. Atocha - terminal T2 takes around 35 minutes in normal traffic conditions. Bus stops: Terminal T2 floor 0, Arrivals area. Terminal T2 floor 2, Departures area Atocha - terminal T4 takes around 40 minutes in normal traffic conditions. Bus stops: Terminal T4 floor 0, Arrivals area. From Atocha Station to Ciudad Universitaria (conference site) take MetroMadrid following these instructions

8 General Information By Train (Valid only for Terminal 4)

The Spanish railway company RENFE, connects Madrid with the Madrid Barajas airport through the local train network service "Cercanías" C1 line.

The train station is only on the terminal T4 floor -1, and is called Aeropuerto T4. To move to the other terminals there is a shuttle bus service connecting the terminals.

Estimated travel time from each train station to the Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas airport:

Príncipe Pío - Aeropuerto T4: 38 minutes. Chamartín - Aeropuerto T4: 11 minutes. Nuevos Ministerios - Aeropuerto T4: 18 minutes. Atocha - Aeropuerto T4: 25 minutes. Puerta del Sol - Aeropuerto T4: 22 minutes. Méndez Álvaro: 29 minutes.

Single ticket is 2,60 € and round-trip ticket is 5,20. The first train with destination to T4 Airport leaves at 6.02 hours from Príncipe Pío (Madrid), and the last leaves at 02.33 hours.

For the connections with MetroMadrid please visit www.metromadrid.es/en or for “Cercanias” please visit www.renfe.com/EN/viajeros/cercanias/madrid/.

9 General Information

ECIS 2017 conference site Universidad Complutense de Madrid at Ciudad Universitaria

10 General Information

11 General Information

Topics

1- Self-Assembly of Surfactants, Lipids, Proteins, Peptides and Supramolecular Polymers 2- Liquid Interfaces, Air-Liquid Interfaces, Membranes, Films and Emulsions: Structure, Dynamics and Elasticity 3- Polymer Solutions, Gels, Liquid Crystals and Polyelectrolytes 4- and Superhydrophobic Surfaces 5- Nanoparticles and Nanostructured Materials 6- Inorganic Colloids and Upconverting Nanomaterials: Synthesis and Application 7- Hydration and Ion Specific Effects 8- Theory and Simulation in Colloid and Thin Layer Systems 9- Advances in Methods of Imaging and Characterization of Colloidal Systems 10- Transport Phenomena in Colloidal Systems, Microdroplets and Microfluidics 11- Medical, Pharmaceutical and Industrial Applications of Colloids 12- Colloids out of Equilibrium and Active Matter

12 Plenary Speakers

Michael Cates

University of Cambridge, UK

Active Colloids: Phase Separation, Clustering, and Directed Assembly

Active colloids typically comprise Janus particles with two hemispheres of different surface chemistry, e.g. catalytic and inert. When placed in a bath of fuel and/or a light field, they have an inherent self-propulsion mechanism that breaks the time-reversal symmetry of microscopic dynamics, continually generating entropy at a local scale. This means that, even in steady-state conditions, the usual laws of equilibrium statistical mechanics do not apply. For example, the random motion of active colloids (whose propulsion directions rotate by angular Brownian motion) can be rectified into a steady current by placing them in an environment of asymmetric obstacles. I will discuss proof-of-principle computer simulations allowing similar effects to be achieved using light-fields alone, through an optical modulation that causes the propulsive speed to depend on position. In practice, this speed also depends on local particle density due to collisional slow-down of the colloids. This can lead to liquid-gas type phase separation among purely repulsive particles. General theories of phase separation without time-reversal symmetry predict various other new phenomena including the arrest of phase separation in a state of dynamically exchanging large clusters. These theories are complemented in some cases by more specific mechanistic models, for example allowing for cross-terms in the propulsion mechanism whereby the chemical gradient created by one-particle causes not only itself, but also its neighbours, to move. I will try to give an overview of recent theoretical developments in this field at a relatively non- technical level.

13 Plenary Speakers

Maria Jose Alonso

Universidad Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Nanoengineered drug delivery systems for helping drugs to reach their targets

Our group, being committed with the translation of ideas from the university through novel pharmaceutical , has designed novel nanostructured materials intended to transport drugs and antigens across biological barriers and to deliver them to the target tissue. During my presentation I would like to overview the different applications of the we have designed until now, with special emphasis in the area of targeted oncologicals and cancer immunotherapy. Overall, our experience in the field of nanomedicine has greatly benefited from integrative approaches adopted by specifically designed consortia. Hopefully, the results of these cooperative efforts will help to accelerate the progress on the rational design of nanomedicines. More information about these projects can be found at: http://www.usc.es/grupos/mjalonsolab/ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The research activity has been founded by the European Commission Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013) (grant agreement n° 281035-TRANS-INT and grant agreement nº 2012-0028, the NanoFar European Doctorate, EMJD NanoFar), and the Horizon 2020 Program (grant agreement n° 646142 – NANOPILOT and grant agreement No. 642028-NABBA). The Ministry of Economy of Spain, Ref. RTC-2014-2375-1 and ”, Ref. BIO2014-53091-C3-2-R, Worldwide Cancer Research Organization, GRANT REF: 15-1346, and Xunta de Galicia, Competitive Reference Groups, GRC2013-043 (FEDER Funds)

14 Plenary Speakers

Jacob Klein

Weizmann Institute, Rehovot, Israel

Interfacial water: from hydrophobic hydration to osteoarthritis

Hydration lubrication1-3 has emerged as a leading paradigm for understanding frictional dissipation in aqueous, especially biological environments. Here I describe recent advances in understanding the role of interfacial water in modulating forces between sliding surfaces, ranging from sliding friction at highly- hydrophobic surfaces4 to the supra-molecular synergy which may underlie the remarkable lubrication of articular cartilage5. The latter in particular holds the key to new insights into the origins of osteoarthritis, the most widespread joint disease.

1. Raviv, U. and Klein, J., ‘Fluidity of bound hydration layers’ – Science 297, 1540-1543 (2002) 2. Briscoe, W.H., Titmuss, S., Tiberg, F., McGillivray, D.J., Thomas, R.K., Klein, J., ‘Boundary lubrication under water’, Nature 444, 191-194 (2006) 3. Ma, L., Gaisinskaya, A., Kampf, N. and Klein, J., ‘Origins of hydration lubrication’, Nature Communications, | 6:6060 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7060 (2015) 4. Goldian-Rosenheck, I., Kampf, N. and Klein, J., ‘Hydration lubrication at hydrophobic surfaces’, submitted 5. Zhu, L., Seror, J., Day, A.J., Kampf, N. and Klein J., ‘Ultra-low friction between boundary layers of hyaluronan-phosphatidylcholine complexes’, submitted

15 Plenary Speakers

Gareth McKinley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA

Frictional Drag Reduction in Turbulent Flows Using Passive and Active Super-Hydrophobic Surfaces

Many different structured surfaces with a wide range of surface chemistries and topographies have been investigated for controlling the wetting (or nonwetting) properties of a fluid/solid interface. Experimental advances in nanofabrication have led to the ability to achieve unprecedented control over the micro- and nano-texture of a substrate and this can result in almost perfect ultrahydrophobicity, at least when probed by the ubiquitous static or dynamically- impacting droplets. An important and ongoing challenge, however, remains developing coatings that are sufficiently and robustly non-wetting or “aerophilic” that they can support an air film or ‘plastron’ when fully immersed in a turbulent liquid flow and thus reduce the frictional drag on the surface. In this talk we explore a number of distinct ways of modifying the dynamic boundary conditions at a three-phase boundary in order to reduce the frictional drag using a bespoke Taylor-Couette fixture that can be mounted onto a commercial controlled stress rheometer. We first show that spray-on superhydrophobic surface treatments can be applied to the rotating inner cylinder that stabilize the resulting plastron in a re-entrant surface microtexture. By carefully controlling the characteristic roughness scales and asperity sizes to match the inherent turbulent lengths we can modify the mixed slip/no slip boundary condition in the viscous boundary layer. This results in frictional drag reductions of up to 20% at Reynolds numbers approaching 105 and the corresponding interfacial slip lengths can be directly extracted from torque measurements. Experiments and simulations both show that at sufficiently high Reynolds numbers these passive plastrons are disrupted by intense turbulent pressure fluctuations; however, we also show that the drag reducing properties can be stabilized and further enhanced through the use of a superhydrophobic Leidenfrost surface (which actively regenerates the plastron though electrical heating) and this can further reduce the frictional drag, by up to 80%. Alternate approaches to reinflating collapsed plastrons through surface catalytic means are also investigated and finally we demonstrate how multi-scale structures that combine microscopic streamwise riblets, nanotexturing and liquid impregnation can also be designed to produce multifunctional drag-reducing and non-fouling surfaces.

16 Plenary Speakers

Katharina Landfester

Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany

Modular design of nanocapsule systems

Polymeric nanocapsules offer the versatility to cover a wide range of mesoscopic properties for sophisticated applications. By means of the miniemulsion process, we can design custom-made nanocapsule systems for different purposes. The encapsulation and release of a great variety of payloads, ranging from hydrophobic to hydrophilic substances has been successfully achieved in a highly controlled manner and with an unmatched high encapsulation efficiency. The preparation of nanocontainers with a hydrophilic core from water-in-oil emulsions and their subsequent transfer to aqueous medium is of special importance since it enables the efficient encapsulation of hydrophilic payloads in large quantities. However, major challenges are associated with their synthesis including low colloidal stability, leakage of encapsulated payloads due to osmotic pressure, and a demanding transfer of the nanocontainers from apolar to aqueous media. We present a general modular approach for the synthesis of polymer nanocontainers that are colloidally stable, not sensitive to osmotic pressure, and responsive to environmental stimuli that trigger release of the nanocontainer contents. Additionally, the nanocontainers can selectively deliver one or two different payloads. Our modular approach uniquely enables the synthesis of nanocontainers for applications in which aqueous environments are desired or inevitable. It will be also shown that the triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion can be performed in water environment via encapsulation of the upconversion dyes in polymeric nanocapsules. Photon energy upconversion is an assembly of inter- and intramolecular processes in which the low energy of multiple photons is harnessed and recombined into a single photon of higher energy. The challenge is to build effective passive and active protection mechanisms against quenching by molecular oxygen and the subsequent production of highly-reactive singlet oxygen which is imperative for long lifetime and efficient upconversion processes in ambient environments.

17 Plenary Speakers

Luis Liz Marzán

CIC biomaGUNE, San Sebastian, Spain Ikerbasque, Basque Foundation for Science, Bilbao Spain

Directed Self-Assembly of Plasmonic Colloids

The assembly of nanoparticle building blocks is a pre- requisite for the amplification of the properties of the components and/or the generation of new features unique to the ensemble. Usually, nanoparticles employed for these assemblies are spherical and lack a geometrical preference toward directional self-assembly, thus limiting their potential applications. In contrast, controlled self-assembly of non-spherical nanoparticles, such as gold nanorods, enables these arrays to form defined 1D, 2D or 3D structures with a vectorial dependence of the desired properties. We show in this communication several examples where the morphology of gold nanoparticles can be modulated by means of colloid chemistry methods, and in turn exploited to direct the assembly of such nanoparticles into a variety of nanostructures with interesting properties.

1. Grzelczak M, Vermant J, Furst E, Liz-Marzán LM, 2010. Directed Self-Assembly of Nanoparticles. ACS Nano 4: 3591-3605. 2. Guerrero-Martínez A, Carbó-Argibay E, Pérez-Juste J, Tardajos G, Liz-Marzán LM, 2009. Gemini surfactant-directed self-assembly of monodisperse gold nanorods into standing superlattices. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 48: 9484-9488. 3. Alvarez-Puebla RA et al., 2011. Real-Time Detection of Scrambled Prions on 3D Supercrystals of Gold Nanorods. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 108: 8157-8161. 4. Grzelczak M et al., 2012. Antibonding Plasmon Modes in Colloidal Gold Nanorod Clusters. Langmuir 28: 8826-8833. 5. Guerrero-Martínez A. et al., 2011. Intense Optical Activity via 3D Chiral Ordering of Plasmonic Nanoantennas. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 50: 5499-5503. 6. Grzelczak M, Sánchez-Iglesias A, Mezerji HH, Bals S, Pérez-Juste J, Liz-Marzán LM, 2012. Steric Hindrance in Colloidal Self-assembly of Gold Nanodumbbells. Nano Lett. 12: 4380-4384

Acknowledgements: This work has been funded by the European Research Council (ERC Advanced Grant #267867 Plasmaquo).

18 Plenary Speakers Thomas Zemb

Institut de Chimie Séparative de Marcoule, France

Manipulating and modelling colloids in order to improve knowledge- based greener processes in extraction, separation and recycling

Developing new experimental techniques aimed to meso- or colloidal scale (recently renamed « nano »), as well as taking into account not only chemical bindings but all derivatives of the free energy as well as elastic energy when relevant is the key towards new processes at the source of circular economy, based on recycling « wastes ». Working since 1979 on “organized molecular matter at nano-scale” in Saclay, later in Canberra and Potsdam and since 2005 in the Institute for separation chemistry I founded in Marcoule, I had the opportunity to participate in several instrumental developments allowing better understanding of complex fluids used in processes: among those USAXS-SAXS-WAXS with high dynamic range associated to measurement of the osmotic pressures over several decades to more recently ultra-centrifugation in complex fluids beyond the Perrin- Svedberg usage in collaboration with Konstanz and Regensburg as well as the detection of nanometric surface oscillation in collaboration with Milano. Predictive modelling always included meso-scale colloidal terms as an integration over the surface to the macrosopic mechanical elasticity terms as well as the sum of chemical binding. This allowed to explained the first equations of states of colloidal crystals, clay-polymer mixtures, mixed lipids and ionic amphiphiles decorated by counter-ions governed by Hofmeister ion-specific effects. Linking experimental methods, multi-scale modelling and improved processes based on knowledge processes as Borromean rings -all relevant to ECIS central preoccupations- will be illustrated by a random biased walk from high resolution studies of surfactant bent film, and applications in the discovery and usage of rigid as well as ultra-flexible emulsions, crystalline catanionics with local order and the giant colloids associated as well as synergy allowing better formulations for extraction/desextraction. Developing experimental techniques associated to modelling interactions “beyond the first neighbour” are in this way at the basis of efficient recycling as well as separation and purification, even improving old but unexplained processes such as “Eau de Cologne” or “Bligh and Dyer” lipid extraction routinely used in biochemistry. Characterization of colloids Modelling the free energy at meso-scale

Better processes based on colloids

19 Plenary Speakers

Steve P. Armes

University of Sheffield, UK

Polymerisation-induced self- assembly

We have recently demonstrated that polymerisation- induced self-assembly (PISA) enables the efficient synthesis of a range of block copolymer nano-objects in water, ethanol or n-alkanes. The basic design rules for PISA are generic: a soluble precursor 'A' block is chain- extended using a second monomer that forms an insoluble 'B' block in the chosen solvent. As this second 'B' block grows in the monomer/solvent reaction mixture, micellar nucleation occurs at some critical chain length, leading to the formation of sterically-stabilized nanoparticles. Depending on the relative volume fractions of the 'A' and 'B' blocks, the copolymer morphology can be either spheres, worms or vesicles. In collaboration with a range of industrial partners, various applications for this platform technology are being explored at U. Sheffield. Both aqueous and non-aqueous PISA formulations will be discussed in this talk. We show that small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a powerful characterization technique that (i) sheds light on the evolution in copolymer morphology during PISA and (ii) can be used to study thermally-induced morphological transitions. In particular, we report the PISA synthesis of a new type of amphiphilic diblock copolymer that can switch reversibly from spheres to worms to vesicles in aqueous solution simply by adjusting the solution temperature – such self- assembly behaviour is unprecedented for a single diblock composition.

20 Keynote Speakers

KN1 Vanessa L. Albernaz, University of Stuttgart, Germany Surface active monomers: tools for the synthesis of functionalized monodisperse polymer nanoparticles

KN2 Luciano Galantini, La Sapienza University, Rome, Italy Supracolloidal association of microgels and supramolecular tubules of bile salt derivatives

KN3 Michael Gradzielski, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany Polyelectrolyte/surfactant complexes (PESCs)–some interesting structural and rheological behavior

KN4 Kevin Roger, Toulouse University, CNRS, Toulouse, France Drying aqueous colloidal systems:molecular interactions, self- assembly and homeostatic behavior

KN5 Jérôme J. Crassous, Lund University, Lund, Sweden Assembling Oppositely Charged Lock and Key Responsive Colloids: A Mesoscale Analogue of Adaptive Chemistry

KN6 Nicholas L. Abbott, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Topological defects in liquid crystals as templates for molecular self- assembly

KN7 Francesca Bomboi, Sapienza Università di Roma, Rome, Italy Unconventional gels made of self-assembling DNA nanostars

KN8 Ernesto Scoppola, Max Planck Institut of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany Floating Lipid Bilayers at the Liquid/Liquid interface

KN9 Andrés Guerrero-Martínez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain Reshaping, Assembly, and Applications of Gold Nanoparticles Assisted by Femtosecond Pulse Lasers

KN10 Emanuel Schneck, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany Standing-wave x-ray fluorescence enables near-angstrom precision depth localization of biologically relevant chemical elements in molecular layers

21 Keynote Speakers

K11 Gregor Trefalt, University of Geneva, Switzerland Interdependence of Double-Layer and Depletion Forces between Charged Surfaces in the Presence of Like-Charged Polyelectrolytes

K12 Helmuth Moehwald, Max-Planck-institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany Self-Regulated Ion Permeation through Extraction Membranes and its Control by Ultrasound

KN13 Jitka Neburkova, Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS, Prague, Czech Republic Optical imaging of localized chemical events using programmable diamond quantum

KN14 Jorge Pérez-Juste, University of Vigo and CINBIO, Spain Au@Ag@ZIF-8 Nanoparticles as Universal SERS-tags for the robust immobilization of functional proteins

KN15 Kenji Aramaki, Yokohama National University, Japan Non-phospholipid-based reverse wormlike micelle formed by a poly(oxybutylene) poly(oxyethylene) block copolymer

KN16 Andreas Zumbuehl, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Cuboid Phospholipid Vesicles Formed by Template-Free Self-Assembly

KN17 Stephen Garoff, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Transport on Liquid Surfaces by Marangoni Flows

KN18 Jianjun Wang, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Anti-Icing Surfaces with Low Adhesion to Condensed Microdroplets

KN19 Erin Koos, KU Leuven, Belgium & Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Structural transitions with variation of the secondary fluid volume fraction in liquid-liquid-solid systems

KN20 Vasyl M. Haramus, Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht: Centre for Materials and Coastal Research, Geesthacht, Germany Rearrangement of lipid lamellar structures under synovial joint-like conditions

22 Keynote Speakers

KN21 Elena Dormidontova, University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA Gold nanoparticles strings and rings in lipid nanodiscs and vesicles

KN22 Vesselin N. Paunov, University of Hull, UK Bioimprinting Technology for the Removal of Blood Cancer Cells from Acute Myeloid Leukaemia Patients

KN23 Glen McHale, Northumbria University, Newcastle, UK Droplet Transport and Positioning on Smart Slippery Surfaces

KN24 Andrea Tummino, Institut Laue Langevin, Grenoble, France Spread polyelectrolyte/surfactant films at the air-water interface: effects of aggregate charge and subphase ionic strength

KN25 Daniele Vigolo, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK Continuous Isotropic-Nematic Transition in Amyloid Fibril Suspensions Driven by Thermophoresis

KN26 Paul Joyce, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden Nanostructuring Biomaterials with Specific Activities towards Digestive Enzymes for Controlled Lipid Hydrolysis

KN27 Ramon Gonzalez Rubio, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain Evaporation of liquid droplets

KN28 M. Lozada-Cassou, Instituto de Energías Renovables, UNAM, Morelos, Mexico Long-range overcharging: Finite concentration colloidal suspensions

KN29 Juan L. Aragones, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain Elasticity induced force reversal between active spinning particles in dense passive media

KN30 Marianna Mamusa, University of Florence, Italy Liposomal delivery of oligonucleotide therapeutics against antibiotic- resistant bacteria

KN31 Xuehua Zhang, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia Controlled Formation of surface nanodroplets by solvent exchange

23 Keynote Speakers

KN32 Pierre Colinet, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium Evaporation of sessile droplets with moving contact lines

KN33 Alex Oppermann, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Structural insights into nanocompartmentalized stimuli responsive microgels by superresolution fluorescence microscopy

KN34 Laurence S. Romsted, Rutgers University, NJ, USA Ion-specific effects on micelles reflect interfacial headgroup- counterion pairing and dehydration: a molecular dynamics/chemical trapping study

KN35 Dominic Hayward, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany New continuous flow chemical reactor for in-situ soft matter research at SANS beamlines

KN36 Jean-Louis Salager, University of the Andes, Merida, Venezuela Optimum formulation relationship to quickly predict a solution in many micro-and macroemulsion applications in surfactant-oil-water systems

24 Program Sunday, September 3, 2017

16:00- Registration 20:00 18:00- Get-Together Reception 20:00

Auditorium Aula Aula de Aula Ramon y Cofares Grados Botella Cajal (Aulario) Monday T5+T6 T1 T3 T2 T3 Tuesday T5+T6 T1 T2 T4 T2 Wednesday T5+T6 T1 T4 T9 T10 Thursday T11 T4 T9+T8 T12 Friday T7+T1 T9 T2

25 Program

Monday, September 4th, 2017 08:30 Opening Ceremony 09:00 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Chair Reinhard Miller 09:15 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Michael Cates, University of Cambridge, UK

Active Colloids: Phase Separation, Clustering, and Directed Assembly 10:00 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Reinhard Miller Thomas Hellweg 10:30 KN1 V. L. Albernaz KN2 L. Galantini Surface active monomers: Supracolloidal association of tools for the synthesis of microgels and supramolecular functionalized tubules of bile salt derivatives monodisperse polymer nanoparticles 11:00 O1 L. Rossi O6 W. Briscoe Colloidal Hematite Cubes: Surface forces and friction Magnetic Properties and mediated by self-assembled Self-Assembly polymer spheres, worms, and hollow spheres 11:20 O2 C. Kuttner O7 C. E. Pinguet Macromolecule-Linked Adjusting the Size of Nanoassemblies Designed Multicompartmental Containers for Robust SERS Made of Anionic Liposomes and Polycations by Introducing Branching and PEO Moieties

26 Program

Monday, September 4th, 2017 08:30 Opening Ceremony 09:00 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Chair Reinhard Miller 09:15 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Michael Cates, University of Cambridge, UK

Active Colloids: Phase Separation, Clustering, and Directed Assembly 10:00 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Laurence Romsted Richard Campbell 10:30 KN3 M. Gradzielski KN4 K. Roger Polyelectrolyte/surfactant Drying aqueous colloidal complexes (PESCs)– some systems: molecular interactions, interesting structural and self-assembly and homeostatic rheological behavior behavior

11:00 O11 J. Esquena O16 W. Kunz Water-in-Water (w/w) New Biofuel Formulations emulsions for preparing microgels

11:20 O12 M. Brugnoni O17 P. A. Kralchevsky Structural Characterization Hardening of particle/water/oil of Hollow Doubly three-phase dispersions due to Thermoresponsive capillary bridges with Microgels applications for new products and materials

27 Program

11:40 O3 G. Isapour O8 E. Locatelli Bioinspired Composite Condensation and Demixing in Materials with Stimuli- solutions of DNA Nanostars and Responsive Color Changing their Mixtures Ability 12:00 O4 M. A. Kalinina O9 A. Moreno Cencerrado Porphyrin-Based Metal- Bacterial Proteins in real-time: Organic Frameworks on An Atomic Force Microscopy Solid-Supported and Quartz Crystal Microbalance Oxide Templates with Dissipation Study 12:20 O5 J. Koetz O10 L. Gentile Asymmetric gold Colloidal nature of soil organic superstructures: In situ matter and its interaction with growth of spherical gold minerals: soil carbon nanoparticles onto the sequestration surface of gold nanotriangles 12:40 Lunch Break

28 Program

11:40 O13 S. Buzzaccaro O18 I. Rodriguez Loureiro Plastic restructuring and Distance-dependent structures intermittent dynamics in a of interacting membranes thermoreversible colloidal displaying synthetic polymers gel and wild -type bacterial lipopolysaccharides 12:00 O14 D. Silva O19 F. Sicard Antibacterial LbL coatings Shrinking Armored Droplets to to control drug release from Advance New Materials for ophthalmic lens Applications 12:20 O15 F. Dutertre O20 L. Bondaz Weak polyelectrolyte Radiolysis of gold ions trapped microgels in a non-aqueous within charged copolymer at the polar solvent air/water interface: a promising route for the fine tuning of gold nanoparticles synthesis 12:40 Lunch Break

29 Program

Monday, September 4th, 2017 Chair Elena Mileva 14:15 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal María José Alonso, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Spain Nanoengineered drug delivery systems for helping drugs to reach their targets Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Elena Mileva Andreas Zumbuel 15:00 KN5 J. J. Crassous KN6 N. L. Abbott Assembling Oppositely Topological defects in liquid Charged Lock and Key crystals as templates for Responsive Colloids: A molecular self-assembly Mesoscale Analogue of Adaptive Chemistry 15:30 O21 S. A. Hill O29 J. Kumar Fluorescent carbon-based Chiral Plasmons as multivalent nanoplatforms Biodetection Tool in for glycan presentation Neurodegenerative Diseases 15:50 O22 M. Quintanilla O30 M. A. Ramin Luminescence-based Membrane fusion induced by Nanothermometers to weak and specific interactions Control Plasmonic Heaters 16:10 O23 V. Salgueiriño O31 M. Valldeperas Improved Performance of The use of lipid sponge-like Magnetic Colloids for Heat nanoparticles as carriers for Delivery and Magnetic macromolecules Guidance Applications 16:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal)

30 Program

Monday, September 4th, 2017 Chair Elena Mileva 14:15 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal María José Alonso, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Spain Nanoengineered drug delivery systems for helping drugs to reach their targets Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Jordi Esquena Angel Delgado 15:00 KN7 F. Bomboi KN8 E. Scoppola Unconventional gels made Floating Lipid Bilayers at the of self-assembling DNA Liquid/Liquid interface nanostars 15:30 O37 S. Sennato O45 G. Dockx Multivariable reentrant Controlling surface coverage in condensation of microgel- Pickering systems: A double polyelectrolyte complexes emulsion templating approach 15:50 O38 H. Petkova O46 F. Pirolt Responsive Inverse Isasomes: From Aqueous Hydrophobically Modified To Oleaginous Poly(acrylates): Molecular Structure Effect 16:10 O39 P. Hansson O47 A. Sanchez-Fernandez Microgels for Drug Surfactant self-assembly in deep Delivery: Loading and eutectic solvents Release in Liquid Flows and Micro-drops 16:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal)

31 Program

Chair Ger Koper Peter Kralchevsky 17:00 O24 D. A. Shipp O32 G. Siegel Nanoparticles from Step- Atherogenesis and plaque Growth Radical Thiol-Ene rupture, surface/interface- Emulsion Polymerizations related phenomena 17:20 O25 A. B. Jódar-Reyes O33 C. Rodríguez-Abreu Dual delivery nanosystem for Mesomorphism and ionic drugs and biomolecules. assembly of 2D molecular Formulation, blocks as potential nanowire characterization and in vitro precursors release 17:40 O26 M. M. Velencoso O34 M. Ali Flame retardant Synthesis and characterization nanocontainers with variable of graphene oxide-polystyrene morphology by polyaddition composite capsules with reaction in inverse aqueous cargo via a water-oil- miniemulsion water multiple emulsion templating route 18:00 O27 M. Pavlovic O35 R. A. Gonçalves Colloidal stability of clay Effect of Additives to Control platelets in the presence of the Lamellar Bilayer Structure oppositely charged inorganic of a Cationic Surfactant” ions, polyelectrolytes or polymeric particles” 18:20 O28 P. da Costa O36 Ž. Medoš Multiple Light Scattering as a Thermodynamics of tool to monitor size evolution micellization: From one- to of nanoparticles during wet two-step model milling, comparison with laser diffraction and DLS 18:50 Poster Session A 20:20 P1+P3+P5+P6+P8

32 Program

Chair Valerie Ravaine Wuge Briscoe 17:00 O40 C. Berlangieri O48 H. M. Sauer Formulation and Fast liquid sheet and filament characterization of dynamics in the fluid splitting hydroxypropyl guar based process gel-like systems, tailored for the low impact cleaning of works of art surfaces 17:20 O41 A. Repula O49 M. Atgié Directing structure in Stabilizing emulsions with colloidal liquid crystals with hydrocolloids: the case of Arabic patchy rod-like particles gum 17:40 O42 F. Mondiot O50 D. Y. C. Chan Optically Active Liquid Highly efficient drag reduction Crystal Coatings containing mechanism by giant gas cavities Plasmonic Colloids 18:00 O43 S. Derkach O51 Z. Samec Structure and properties of Visualization of the interfacial hydrogels formed by turbulence at the polyelectrolyte complexes electrochemically polarized of κ-carrageenan with liquid-liquid interface gelatin 18:20 O44 N. Huang O52 T. Gurkov Biodegradable emulsions Kinetic effects in the interfacial using PLGA nanoparticles: rheology and the adsorption, in structure and physico- systems containing proteins, chemical study polymers, and surfactants 18:50 Poster Session A 20:20 P1+P3+P5+P6+P8

33 Program

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017 Chair Julia Perez Prieto 08:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Jacob Klein, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel

Interfacial water: from hydrophobic hydration to osteoarthritis 09:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Julia Perez Prieto Vesselin Paunov 10:00 KN9 A. Guerrero- KN10 E. Schneck Martínez Standing-wave x-ray Reshaping, Assembly, and fluorescence enables near- Applications of Gold angstrom precision depth Nanoparticles Assisted by localization of biologically Femtosecond Pulse Lasers relevant chemical elements in molecular layers 10.30 O53 M. Filice O59 M. Simon Standardization of iron Investigating the Static and oxide nanoparticles surface Dynamic Behavior of by oleic acid/DMSA ligand Microemulsion-Polyelectrolyte exchange reaction for Complexes advanced biomedical applications 10:50 O54 J. Schubert O60 R. Bordes Combining the Best of two Nonionic cleavable monomeric Worlds: Protein-Polymer and dimeric surfactant: effect of Coatings for Stimulated the temperature on the Phase Transfer of degradation Nanoparticles

34 Program

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017 Chair Julia Perez Prieto 08:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Jacob Klein, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel

Interfacial water: from hydrophobic hydration to osteoarthritis 09:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Jhoan Toro Mendoza Delfi Bastos 10:00 K11 G. Trefalt K12 H. Moehwald Interdependence of Double- Self-Regulated Ion Permeation Layer and Depletion Forces through Extraction between Charged Surfaces in Membranes and its Control by the Presence of Like-Charged Ultrasound Polyelectrolytes 10.30 O65 Hans Jürgen Butt O71 F. Amadei Crystallization in confinement In vitro models to investigate the interaction between lipids and mucin: a micro- interferometry study 10:50 O66 I. Natalia O72 H. Chakibi Shear induced network Multi-scale approach to orientation of capillary understand oil droplets suspensions collection by air bubbles in flotation: impact of salinity and water soluble polymer

35 Program 11:10 O55 R. Contreras- O61 S. Esteban-Perez Caceres Combination of water- Hybrid pH-Responsive inmiscible and water-miscible Au@p4VP Microgels as solvents in dexamethasone- Platform for Selective SERS loaded microspheres PLGA Analysis elaboration 11:30 O56 P. Yazhgur O62 A. vander Straeten Hyperuniformity of Protein-polyelectrolyte bidisperse particle mixtures complexes to improve the bioactivity of proteins in layer- by-layer assemblies 11:50 O57 E. Valero O63 W. Loh Platinum nanoparticles from Molecular assembly in block the recycling of spent screen- copolymer-surfactant printed electrodes to be used nanoparticles dispersions: as hydrogen peroxide sensors Information on dissociated species from NMR diffusometry 12:10 O58 F. Aubrit O64 A. Filippov Gold Nanoparticles Insertion Prediction of Transport Into Organized Block- Properties of Hybrid Bilayer Copolymer Films Ion-Exchange Membranes 12:30 Lunch Break

36 Program 11:10 O67 V. O73 J. Otero Márquez Lakshminarayanan Building bridges driven by Kinetic and Random graph solvent transfer between theory based model for pH droplets drop dependent material properties in an acid triggered supramolecular hydrogel 11:30 O68 J. Salopek O74 A. De Santis Polyelectrolyte complexes and Structural characterization of multilayers: ion-specific model membranes containing effects and overcharging DHA: the role of a unique molecule 11:50 O69 F. Waggett O75 A. Ash Electrolyte-induced Attraction A combined in-vitro/in-vivo of Sterically Stabilised PMMA study to investigate the Particles in a Low Dielectric mucoadhesive mechanisms of Solvent cationic, anionic and uncharged emulsions in the mouth 12:10 O70 C. Cardelli O76 I. Bouhid de Aguiar The role of directional Deswelling and deformation interactions in the of microgels in concentrated designability of generalized packings heteropolymers 12:30 Lunch Break

37 Program

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017 Chair Francoise Winnik 14:00 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Gareth McKinley, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA

Frictional Drag Reduction in Turbulent Flows Using Passive and Active Super-Hydrophobic Surfaces Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Francoise Winnik Otto Glatter 14:45 KN13 J. Neburkova KN15 K. Aramaki Optical imaging of localized Non-phospholipid-based chemical events using reverse wormlike micelle programmable diamond formed by a poly(oxybutylene) quantum poly(oxyethylene) block copolymer 15:15 O77 E. Kutorglo O84 F. Sebastiani Effect of nanoparticle size Lipid-Alkylglycoside liposomes and shape on morphology as a biocompatible vehicle: and pore size distribution of structural characterization and conductive porous materials future application 15:35 O78 J. Pérez-Prieto O85 T. Hellweg Water-soluble naked gold Scattering Study on Small nanoclusters are not Unilamellar DMPC-Vesicles luminescent Incorporating the Saponin Escin 15:55 O79 E. H. Hill O86 T. Lopian Plasmonic Monitoring of Macro-and microscopic phase Surface Topography Effects behavior in metal-extracting on Biofilm Growth water-poor microemulsions

38 Program

Tuesday, September 5, 2017 Chair Francoise Winnik 14:00 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Gareth McKinley, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA

Frictional Drag Reduction in Turbulent Flows Using Passive and Active Super-Hydrophobic Surfaces Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Hans Jürgen Butt Marta Maria Natile 14:45 KN17 S. Garoff KN19 E. Koos Transport on Liquid Surfaces Structural transitions with by Marangoni Flows variation of the secondary fluid volume fraction in liquid- liquid-solid systems 15:15 O91 V. Starov O98 A. Slastanova Spreading of liquids over Centipede and comb polymers porous substrates at air-water interface 15:35 O92 N. Vrancken O99 F. Ravera An ATR-FTIR based method Mixtures of solid for dynamic analysis of nanoparticles at water-air wetting transitions on interfaces superhydrophobic nanostructured surfaces 15:55 O93 R. Prathapan O100 L. R. Arriaga Decreasing the wettability of Nanoparticle-induced cellulose nanocrystal surfaces membrane domain formation using wrinkle-based alignment in double emulsion templated lipid vesicles

39 Program 16:15 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Chair Pierandrea Lo Nostro Anatoly Filipov 16:45 KN14 J. Pérez-Juste KN16 A. Zumbuehl Au@Ag@ZIF-8 Nanoparticles Cuboid Phospholipid Vesicles as Universal SERS-tags for Formed by Template-Free Self- the robust immobilization of Assembly functional proteins 17:15 O80 F. Tamimi O87 A. Shchekin Two-Dimensional Analytical and numerical Magnesium Phosphate models in kinetics of Nanosheets Form Highly aggregation and relaxation in Thixotropic Gels That Up- surfactant solutions: recent Regulate Bone Formation results 17:35 O81 O. Koshkina O88 A. Xenakis Perfluorocarbon-loaded Water-in-oil microemulsions Polymeric Nanoparticles with encapsulated nisin: Effect with Unusual Structure for of additives on structure and Multimodal In Vivo Imaging efficacy 17:55 O82 F. Carn O89 L. Viitala Controlled Assembly of Phase and Shape Transitions of Nanoparticle Mediated by Surface-Polymer-Controlled Electrostatic Complexation Phospholipid Systems with Long Polyelectrolyte Chains 18:15 O83 I. Szilagyi O90 C. Ye Design of Stable Cellulose Nanocrystal Nanocomposite Suspensions Microcapsules as Tunable of Enzymatic Activity Cages for Nano-and Microparticles 18:50 Poster Session A 20:20 P1+P3+P5+P6+P8

40 Program 16:15 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Chair Michele Ferrari Klemen Bohinc 16:45 KN18 J. Wang KN20 V. M. Garamus Anti-Icing Surfaces with Low Rearrangement of lipid Adhesion to Condensed lamellar structures under Microdroplets synovial joint-like conditions 17:15 O94 A. Gulraiz O101 P. Brocca Hysteresis of of Biomolecules absorbing at air- Sessile Droplets on liquid and liquid-liquid Deformable Substrates: interface. Influence of Disjoining Pressure 17:35 O95 V. N. Paunov O102 M. Wlodek Preparation and attachment of Structural evolution of composite porous supra- POPC/POPE supported lipid particles to liquid interfaces: bilayers intercalated with Theory and experiment quantum dots 17:55 O96 L. Boinovich O103 R. García-Álvarez Can long-chain alcohols be In Vivo Protein Corona used as antifreeze for aqueous Formation on Gold droplets on hydrophobic Nanoparticles of Various Size surfaces? and Shape 18:15 O97 P. B. Miranda O104 A. Akanno Interaction of water with the Interaction in Polyelectrolyte- Gypsum (010) surface:a study Surfactant Mixtures by SFG vibrational spectroscopy and ab initio MD simulations 18:50 Poster Session A 20:20 P1+P3+P5+P6+P8

41 Program

Wednesday, September 6, 2017 Chair Helmuth Moehwald 8:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Katharina Landfester, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany

Modular design of nanocapsule systems 9:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon Y Cajal) Auditorium Ramon Y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Helmuth Moehwald Francisco Ortega 10:00 KN21 E. Dormidontova KN22 V. N. Paunov Gold nanoparticles strings and Bioimprinting Technology for rings in lipid nanodiscs and the Removal of Blood Cancer vesicles Cells from Acute Myeloid Leukaemia Patients 10:30 O105 D. Mendez O111 M. Werner Gonzalez PFA-PEG particles: A colloidal Oligonucleotide sensor based model system for the on selective capture of investigation of phase upconversion nanoparticles diagrams of PEGylated drug triggered by target-induced carrier systems DNA inter-strand ligand reaction 10:50 O106 C. Karner O112 F. Herranz Glassy orientational dynamics Core-doped nano- in plastic crystals of aspheric radiomaterials for Enhanced colloids Molecular Imaging 11:10 O107 A. M. Steiner O113 K. Scheffler Formation of oriented Combination of Layer-by- plasmonic oligomers on Layer based Drug Delivery elastomeric substrate via Systems and Vesicular macroscopic strain Stomatitis Virus G-protein for Enhanced Intracellular Processing of Active Agents

42 Program

Wednesday, September 6, 2017 Chair Helmuth Moehwald 8:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Katharina Landfester, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany

Modular design of nanocapsule systems 9:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Stephen Garoff Björn Lindman 10:00 KN23 G. McHale KN24 A. Tummino Droplet Transport and Spread polyelectrolyte Positioning on Smart /surfactant films at the air- Slippery Surfaces water interface: effects of aggregate charge and subphase ionic strength 10:30 O117 J. McClements O123 S. Fischer Investigating the Silmultaneous stress and Morphology of Polymer Thin weight measuraments for Films and Nanostructures on particulate films made from Mica and Graphite Surfaces capillary suspensions 10:50 O118 F. Geyer O124 X. Liu Enhancing carbon dioxide 2D Hierarchical Organization of capture using robust Semi-Fluorinated Alkanes in superomniphobic Nanometric Surface Domains membranes and Giant Spherulites 11:10 O119 P. M. Seiler O125 C. Redeker Liquid drop motion through Structure and Interactions of shear forces on a smooth Lipopolysaccharide Layers rigid substrate

43 Program 11:30 O108 F. Dekker O114 F. Engert Preparation and Light Interlocking of two Drug Scattering Properties of Delivery Systems:Layer-by- Hollow Silica Nanocubes Layer Microcarriers and DNA Origami Nanocarriers 11:50 O109 O. Álvarez- O115 L. Pichavant Bermúdez Thermosensitive Magnetically separable polynorbornene polymer/metal oxide poly(ethylene oxide) nanocarriers prepared in nanoparticles loaded with miniemulsion with high miDNAs: an innovative performance in approach for acting on cancer- heterogeneous catalysis associated pain 12:10 O110 M. Maria Natile O116 J. Balegamire Upconverting nanoplatform Synthesis and for shifting metallodrugs light characterization of iodinated activation in the therapeutic polymer particles and use as a window contrast agent for tomography using a spectral scanner 12:30 Lunch Break 14:00 Poster Session B 17:00 P2+P4+P7+P9+P10+P11+P12 19:45 Buses Depart for Conference Dinner 20:15 Conference Dinner

44 Program 11:30 O120 V. Ravaine O126 M. Fernandez Mapping the 2D organization Martinez of microgels at liquid Getting the inside view of interfaces: model surfaces colloids with a SAXS/WAXS and emulsions instrument 11:50 O121 V. Vercillo O127 J. M. Meijer Short Pulsed Laser Phase behaviour of Bowl- Micro/Nanostructuring of Shaped Colloids Surfaces for Improved Functional Applications 12:10 O122 J. Francisco O128 A. Del Giudice Gonzalez A time-dependent pH scanning How are waterborne wood of the acid-induced unfolding of finishes affected by ambient Human Serum Albumin humidity? 12:30 Lunch Break 14:00 Poster Session B 17:00 P2+P4+P7+P9+P10+P11+P12 19:45 Buses Depart for Conference Dinner 20:15 Conference Dinner

45 Program

Thursday, September 7, 2017 Chair Jorge Perez Juste 08:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Luis Liz Marzán, CIC BioMagune, San Sebastian, Spain

Directed Self-Assembly of Plasmonic Colloids 9:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Auditorium Ramon y Aula de Grados Cajal Chair Jorge Perez Juste Victor Starov 10:00 KN25 D. Vigolo KN26 P. Joyce Continuous Isotropic- Nanostructuring Biomaterials Nematic Transition in with Specific Activities towards Amyloid Fibril Suspensions Digestive Enzymes for Driven by Thermophoresis Controlled Lipid Hydrolysis 10:30 O129 O. Manor O135 A. B. Said Pattern deposition and Radioactive soil surface forces decontamination: investigation of fine colloidal aggregates extraction from soil via froth flotation technology 10:50 O130 F. Monroy O136 B. Lonetti Microfluidic-assisted Pheophorbide a in action. A determination of phase simple membrane model to diagrams of aqueous two- understand its release from phase systems within double polymer nanocarriers emulsion drops

46 Program

Thursday, September 7, 2017 Chair Jorge Perez Juste 08:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Luis Liz Marzán, CIC BioMagune, San Sebastian, Spain

Directed Self-Assembly of Plasmonic Colloids 9:30 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Tatiana Gambaryan- Antonio Fernandez Roisman Barbero 10:00 KN27 R. Gonzalez Rubio KN28 M. Lozada-Cassou Evaporation of liquid Long-range overcharging: droplets Finite concentration colloidal suspensions 10:30 O141 B. Bolteau O147 G. Koper Wetting on Magnetically Transport in Proton Exchange Actuated Superhydrophobic Membranes for Fuel Cell Surfaces Applications – A systematic non-equilibrium approach 10:50 O142 B. P. Cahill O148 R. Tuinier Low-Voltage Depletion interaction in on Multilayer-Dielectrics colloidal dispersions: controlled attractions? 11:10 O143 T. P. Corrales O149 J. Toro Mendoza The Reverse Coffee-Ring Emulsification Kinetics: Effect: Wetting of n-alkane Assessing the intertwining Molecular Films roles of oil viscosity and interfacial tension

47 Program 11:10 O131 M. Li O137 P. Erni Surface Nanodroplets Delivery Systems for Low Enabled Micro-Sampling Molecular Weight Payloads: Platform for Concentrating Composite and Analysing Trace Coacervate/Polyurea Core- Hydrophobic Solute in Water Shell Capsules 11:30 O132 E. Homede O138 F. J. Ostos Pattern Deposition of P-Sulfocalix[6]Arene as Colloidal Particles into a nanocarrier for controlled microfluidic chamber: Role of delivery of doxorubicin DLVO Forces and Mechanism Proposition 11:50 O133 A. V. Delgado O139 R. Alvarez-Asencio Soft electrodes for blue Tactile and hair–hair friction energy production and water behavior of hair fibers 12:10 O134 N. M. Kovalchuk O140 P. M. Worsh Effect of surfactant dynamics Analysis of Drug Delivery on microfluidic Systems with SAXS in the emulsification Laboratory 12:30 Lunch Break

48 Program 11:30 O144 E. Alam O150 J. F. Wilson Viscous Drop Impact on Soft Mechanical analysis of particle Deformable Substrates interactions and their effect on the macroscopic response of nanoparticle assemblies 11:50 O145 H. Tarábková O151 D. Harries Gasseous nanobubbles as How Cosolutes Stabilize important component of Macromolecules: from Bridging solid/liquid interface to Depletion Attraction 12:10 O146 P. Chang O152 K. Bohinc Observation of impregnating Incorporation of ion structure wetting behaviour of a liquid into Poisson-Boltzmann theory drop on hydrophilic patterned surfaces 12:30 Lunch Break

49 Program

Thursday, September 7, 2017 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal Aula de Grados Chair Faleh Tamimi Brian Vincent 13:40 KN29 J. L. Aragones KN30 M. Mamusa Elasticity induced force Liposomal delivery of reversal between active oligonucleotide therapeutics spinning particles in dense against antibiotic-resistant passive media bacteria 14:10 O153 E. Mani O158 K. P. Velikov Effect of rotational Future food structuring diffusivity on the clustering technologies at micro-and of self-propelling colloids nanoscale 14:30 O154 A. Maestro O159 F. Reyes-Ortega Control over phase Novel smart polymer-coated synchronisation in rotor magnetite nanoparticles with models of motile cilia hyperthermia properties 14:50 O155 M. Laurati O160 P. Rouster Directed percolation:an Elaboration of functionalized equilibrium pre-transition titania nanosheet based towards non-equilibrium nanocarriers for antioxidant arrested gel states applications 15:10 O156 E. Oguztürk O161 V. Marko Active Hybrid Supraparticles Simultaneous encapsulation of Containing Microfibrillated bioactive components for Cellulose [MFC] nutrition and plant protection 15:30 O157 A. B. Tesler O162 C. Bravo-Diaz Ultrasensitive Colorimetric Structure-activity relationships Detection of the Earlier governing the efficiency of Stages of Metallic Corrosion antioxidants in multiphasic Using Plasmonic Gold Nano– systems: tuning interfacial Islands concentrations 15:50 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) 16:20 ECIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

50 Program Thursday, September 7, 2017 Aula Botella Aula Cofares Chair Francisco Monroy M. Lozada Cassou 13:40 KN31 X. Zhang KN33 A. Oppermann Controlled Formation of Structural insights into surface nanodroplets by nanocompartmentalized solvent exchange stimuli responsive microgels by superresolution fluorescence microscopy 14:10 O163 D. Lohse O167 S. Caimi Diffusive interaction of Tracking of fluorescently multiple surface labelled polymer particles nanobubbles reveals surface effects during shear-controlled aggregation 14:30 O164 A. M. Emelyanenko O168 J. F. Art Anisotropic spreading along Immobilization of aluminum the textured surfaces with hydroxide particles on quartz isotropic wetting crystal microbalance sensors to elucidate antigen-adjuvant interaction mechanisms in vaccines 14:50 O165 H. Teisala O169 S. Süß Wetting over pre-existing A standardized routine for the liquid films–a tsunami on determination of particle microscale surface properties based on analytical centrifugation 15:10 O166 D. Bastos-González O170 O. Mannix Interaction of super- Self-assembly, shape- chaotropic ions with selectivity and stability of proteins chitosan/nanoparticle colloids by TR-USAXS 15:30 KN32 P. Colinet O171 L. Zhou Evaporation of sessile Adsorption Morphology of droplets with moving Lipids on Graphene Surface contact lines 15:50 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) 16:20 ECIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY 51 Program

Friday, September 8, 2017 Chair Debora Berti 08:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Thomas Zemb, Institut de Chimie Séparative de Marcoule, France

Manipulating and modelling colloids in order to improve knowledge-based greener processes in extraction, separation and recycling 9:45 Coffee Break (Auditorium Ramon y Cajal) Auditorium Ramon y Aula Botella Aula de Grados Cajal Chair Debora Berti Paz Sevilla M. Bešter Rogač 10:15 KN34 L. S. Romsted KN35 D. Hayward KN36 J. L. Salager Ion-specific effects New continuous Optimum on micelles reflect flow chemical formulation interfacial reactor for in-situ relationship to headgroup- soft matter quickly predict a counterion pairing research at SANS solution in many and dehydration: a beamlines micro-and molecular macroemulsion dynamics/chemical applications in trapping study surfactant-oil- water systems

10:45 O172 N. Aydogan O175 B. Loppinet O178 O. Glatter Colloidal Near-wall Surfactant-free Microcapsules for velocimetry of W/O emulsions for Dual Drug Delivery complex fluids on skin-care a rheometer using applications evanescent wave dynamic light scattering

52 Program 11:05 O173 R. A. O176 J. Sjollema O179 D. Campbell Bacterial adhesion Constantin General Physical to surfaces is Nanoscale Description of the accomplished by mechanics of Behavior of detachment and inclusions in lipid Oppositely Charged (re)-attachment of bilayers Polyelectrolyte/Surf multiple, actant Mixtures at reversibly-binding the Air/Water tethers Interface 11:25 O174 J. Sotres O177 L. Cantù O180 H. Ex-Vivo Force Amyloid-β Yalcinkaya Spectroscopy of peptides Controlling and Intestinal Mucosa aggregation and Formation of their interaction Vesicle Based with raft-mime Polymeric model membranes Nanocapsules Chair Piotr Warszynski 11:45 Auditorium Ramon y Cajal

Steve P. Armes, The University of Sheffield, UK

Polymerisation-induced self-assembly ECIS-Solvay Prize Ceremony 12:45 Closing Session Poster Prize Contest Sponsored by Elsevier (5 awards) Prize of the Royal Society of Chemistry and Soft Matter (3 poster awards) MDPI-Polymers Prize (2 posters and 1 oral) Langmuir Prize for best oral presentation of a young scientist (3 awards) Presented by Prof. Francoise Winnik Enzo Ferroni Award for a Young Scientist Presented by Prof. Pierandrea Lo Nostro Closing Remarks 13:30 Farewell and Departure

53 Poster Session A

4th and 5th of September 2017 – 18:50-20:20 “Aulario de Farmacia” T1: Self-assembly of Surfactants, Lipids, Proteins, Peptides and Supramolecular Polymers Nº Name Title P1-1 Jong Choo Lim Synthesis of environment friendly biosurfactants based on vegetable oils and characterization of interfacial properties for cosmetic and household products formulations P1-2 Magdalena The effect of temperature on values of diffusion Szaniawska coefficients of nonionic Tween surfactants

P1-3 Avigail Baruch Rationally Designed Peptides for Organophosphate Adsorption P1-4 Werner Kunz Clear solutions of Rebaudioside A and Sodium Oleate at neutral pH P1-5 Meera Thomas Polyelectrolyte induced swelling of an amphiphilic lamellar phase P1-6 Carlos I. Incomplete capsid formation: coarse-grained and Mendoza elastic modeling P1-7 Tsang-Lang Lin Small-angle X-ray scattering studies on the structure of disc-shaped DPPC/Triton X-100 bicelles P1-8 Wenyue Zou Photomodulation of bacterial growth and biofilm formation using carbohydrate-based surfactants P1-9 Ho-Cheol Kang Syntheses and Surface-Active Properties of New Amphoteric Photosensitive Surfactants Containing Azobenzene Moiety P1-10 Mercedes New micelles of ionic carbosilane dendrons Valiente P1-11 Federica Self-assembling properties in aqueous solution of Novelli the lipo peptide lauril-Gly-Gly-D-Ser-D-Asp-NH2

P1-12 Eva María Arias Influence of surfactant structure on highly concentrated emulsions stability and drug release

54 Poster Session A

P1-13 Miho Kamada Perfume solubilization effect on rheological properties of worm like micellar gel in bio-based isosorbide surfactants systems P1-14 Pengxiang The N-allyl substituted effect on wormlike Wang micelles and salt tolerance of an cationic surfactant with C22 unsaturated tail P1-15 Bojan Šarac Thermodynamic study for micellization of imidazolium based surface active ionic liquids in water: Effect of alkyl chain length on N3 position P1-16 Ruslan R. β-cyclodextrin–surfactant complexes in Kashapov developing the design of functional systems P1-17 G.S. Georgieva Synergistic micellar growth in mixed surfactant solutions: Rheology and cryo-TEM imaging P1-18 Weifeng Lin Normal and shear forces between surfaces coated by phosphocholine-exposing micelles P1-19 Andreia A. S. Preparation of sugar based vesicles by injection Alves method: role of the solvent chain length P1-20 Takeshi Misono Preparation of elastic noisome by polyglycerol fatty acids and skin penetration property P1-21 M. Martínez- Gemini-bola form hybrid-type lipids as efficient Negro nanocarriers in gene therapy P1-22 M. Luísa Ramos Nanostructuring the conjugated polymer poly[N(1-aza-16-crown-6)carbamido-2,5- thienylene-alt-1,4-phenylene with the surfactant sodium dodecylsulfate in aqueous solution P1-23 Jörg Koop Surface Activity of Proteins: Role of secondary structure P1-24 Manoni Study of Structure of Nonionic Reverse Micelles Kurtanidze Modified with Sodium Cholate P1-25 Inbar Freilich Examination of Self Assembly of Soft Matter in 3D P1-26 Ludmila Aricov The effect of surfactant impurity on the polyacrylate-ionic surfactant interaction P1-27 Elena Mileva Capture of LPS traces in aqueous solutions by tectomers of four-antennary oligoglycines P1-28 Dan-Florin Natural aging of LbL films containing associative Anghel polymers or their complexes with surfactants P1-29 Dan-Florin The behavior of linear and hyperbranched Anghel polyglycidol in water and aqueous micellar solutions 55 Poster Session A

P1-30 A. Plotniece Lipid-like bifunctional 4-(N-alkylpyridinium)-1,4- dihydropyridines with propargyl moiety: contribution of molecular structure to cytotoxicity, physicochemical and self-assembling properties P1-31 Szczęch M The polymer-based complexes as non-viral vectors for gene delivery P1-32 Zhanar Synthesis of keratin foamer and the influence of Ospanova surfactant on its foaming ability P1-33 Elena Mileva Soft nanostructures based on antennary peptide amphiphiles P1-34 Christiane A Annealing in polyelectrolyte multilayers: Helm influence of entanglements P1-35 Marina Study of Structure of Mixed Reversed Micelles on Rukhadze the Basis of Polyoxyethylene (4) Lauryl Ether and Sodium Cholate P1-36 Gianmarco Aggregation of colloidal spheres mediated by Munao Janus dimers P1-37 Federica Alkylglycoside surfactants with oligomeric head- Sebastiani group: investigation of self-assembly and its implications for future applications P1-38 Simon Gourdin- Modelisation of microemulsion for liquid-liquid Bertin extraction P1-39 Mohamad Droplet Drying Kinetics: Inter-particle Interaction Danial Shafiq P1-40 Maximilian Viscosity increase and control of N,N-dialkylamide Pleines extractants in presence of uranyl P1-41 Luis Bondaz Structure of block copolymer frozen micelle in gold solution P1-42 Barbara Lonetti A shear-induced network of aligned wormlike micelles in a sugar-based molecular gel P1-43 Mervat Shafik Studying the interaction of hydrophobically Ibrahim modified ethoxylated urethane (HEUR) polymers with sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) in aqueous solution P1-44 Changwoo Do Determination of Nanostructures of Block Copolymer Self-Assemblies via Simultaneous Use of Small Angle X-ray and Neutron Scattering Measurements 56 Poster Session A

P1-45 Ruslan R. Supramolecular amphiphilic systems based on Kashapov calix[4]arenes P1-46 Silvia Fogli Aggregation states of glycoconjugated dyes in water P1-47 Magdalena Spectroscopic study of aqueous solutions of Szaniawska nonionic surfactants, derivatives of D-sorbitol P1-48 Ramsia Sreij Interaction of the saponin aescin with cholesterol in DMPC vesicles P1-49 Dimi Adsorption Layer and Bulk Properties of Two- Arabadzhieva antennary oligoglycine C8-T2: pH dependency P1-50 Rohini Kanwar Lipid Based Liquid Crystalline nanoparticles as Potent Therapeutic Modules for Anti-Leprosy Drugs P1-51 Andrew Biomolecules in Deep Eutectic Solvents Jackson P1-52 Yosuke Imai Effect of headgroup structure on counterion binding in surfactant adsorbed films studied through total reflection XAFS P1-53 Anna Taraba Ultrasonic studies of aqueous solutions of nonionic surfactants at different temperatures P1-54 Julia Genova Physical characterization of bilayer lipid membranes doped with cholesterol

57 Poster Session A 4th and 5th of September 2017 – 18:50-20:20 “Aulario de Farmacia” T3: Polymer Solutions, Gels, Liquid Crystals and Polyelectrolytes Nº Name Title P3-1 K. A. Wilk Release profiles of esculin-loaded hydrogel microcapsules covered with polyelectrolyte shells P3-2 Marianna Lyotropic behavior of a poly(ethylene oxide)- Mamusa graft-poly(vinyl acetate) copolymer in polar and nonpolar media P3-3 Miloslav Pekař Polyelectrolyte-surfactant hydrogels – preparation,properties P3-4 Jana Vojtová Sugar and pH responsive nano-assemblies based on boronic acid-containing polyelectrolytes P3-5 Magdalena Flocculating activity of Rhodococcus opacus FCL- Czemierska 1069 P3-6 Magdalena Physicochemical characteristic of bioflocculant Czemierska from Rhodococcus rhodochrous P3-7 Björn Kuttich Dynamical and structural properties of a polymer confined in nanoscopic droplets P3-8 Cristian A. Design of materials based on marine biopolymers Acevedo to culture muscle-cells P3-9 Yousof Farrag Methacrylate hydrogels for biomedical applications P3-10 María I. Electrochemical Properties of Poly(Azure A) films González- synthesized in sodium dodecyl sulfate solution Sánchez P3-11 Miroslav Poly(N-Isopropylacrylamide)s with dodecyl and Štěpánek carboxyl terminal groups in aqueous solution: Influence of electrostatic interactions on thermoresponsive behavior P3-12 Olivier Bernard Thermodynamic properties of polyelectrolytes and associating electrolytes in solution P3-13 Sam Hare Gels, Can They Handle the Heat? – The Temperature Dependence of Colloid-Polymer Gel Collapse P3-14 Chan Woo Park Intercalation of cationic polyelectrolyte into clay interlayer for desorption of Cs ions 58 Poster Session A

P3-15 Aitor Larrañaga Chitosan-based dual-drug delivery thermo- responsive hydrogels for wound healing applications P3-16 Claes Jidheden Single microgels in core/shell equilibrium: A novel method for limited volume studies P3-17 Annabelle Upper Critical Solution Temperature (UCST)-type Bertin thermoresponsive polymers from acrylamide- based monomers P3-18 Fernando Phenomenological Molecular Order Identification Rodríguez Díaz through Volume Phase Transition in Thermoresponsive Hybrid Microgels P3-19 Judith Witte Dynamics of polymer brushes and adsorbed microgel particles near solid planar surfaces P3-20 Srivatssan Rheology of cellulose microfibril networks Mohan dispersed in media of low dielectric contrast P3-21 J. P. Chapel Structure, thermodynamic and kinetic signatures of a model synthetic polyelectrolyte coacervating system P3-22 Athanasios Light induced patterning in transparent polydiene Bogris solutions P3-23 M. Lehmann A DLS Setup for in-situ Measurements of Photo- Induced Size Changes in AuNP-Microgel Hybrids

59 Poster Session A 4th and 5th of September 2017 – 18:50-20:20 “Aulario de Farmacia” T5: Nanoparticles and Nanostructured Materials Nº Name Title P5-1 Lyudmyla Engineering of interfaces in the nanostructured Karabanova materials based on polyurethane and multi- walled carbonanotubes with surface functionalization P5-2 M. Šoóš Effect of nanoparticle morphology on the strength of fractal aggregates P5-3 Agata Pucek Antimicrobial lipid nanocarriers loaded with organoselenium compounds: Fabrication, physical stability and biological evaluation P5-4 Emilia Influence of material properties and conditions Stelmach prevailing in the sample on the optical responses of nanostructural micelle based optical probes P5-5 Emilia Piosik The incorporation of magnetite nanoparticles into model biological membranes P5-6 Konrad The surface properties of biopolymers Terpiłowski P5-7 Konrad The surface properties of graphene and Terpiłowski graphene/diamonds metal composites P5-8 K. Wiercigroc Phospholipid nanostructures loaded with Walkosz quantum dots P5-9 Mirjana I. Effect of Fe3+ doping of ZrO2 nanoparticles using Čomor colloidal chemistry/solvothermal method, on its physicochemical properties P5-10 Jarosław Perylene derivatives in polymer matrixes as Makowiecki active layers for organic light emitting diodes

P5-11 Abraham F. Layer by layer self-assembled of Palomec synthetic/natural polyelectrolytes multilayers on Garfias maghemite nanoparticles P5-12 Katiúscia Vieira In vitro cytotoxic evaluation of the curcumin Jardim encapsulated in multlayers of biopolymer- magnetic nanoparticles P5-13 Yves Chevalier Dispersion of polymer nanoparticles using block copolymer dispersant 60 Poster Session A

P5-14 M. Gómez- Development and characterization of an eye- Ballesteros drop liposomal formulation with acetazolamide P5-15 Kristina G. Decoration of plasmonic nanoparticles with Wagner responsive polymers P5-16 Edit Csapó Tuneable optical features of amino acids- stabilized gold nanoparticles and nanoclusters P5-17 Ye Yu Role of nanocavities in surface enhanced photoluminescence P5-18 A.M. van Colloidal Stability of Aqueous Iron Oxide Silfhout Nanoparticles with Reversibly Adsorbed Phosphorylated Poly(Ethylene Glycol) P5-19 Javier Lopez- Optimization studies of assembling gelatin Cano nanoparticles obtained by two step desolvation technique P5-20 Laura J. Fox Fundamentals of Nanotoxicity: Interactions between Nanoparticles and Cell Membranes P5-21 Irene Anton Functionalized nanocellulose for epithelial regeneration P5-22 Francisco Nanoporous PEDOT/FAD modified glassy carbon Armijo electrode obtained in sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) and its application for the electrochemical detection of NADH P5-23 Beatriz Gómez- Electrochemical sensors based on in situ grown Monedero bimetallic nanoparticles from recovered inks of spent screen-printed electrodes P5-24 Roland P. M. Protein-Assisted Plasmonic Nanoclusters as Höller Colloidal SERS Sensors P5-25 Carmen Cavallo Synthesis and Characterization of Nb2O5 Mesostructures with Tunable Morphology and Their Application in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells P5-26 Karolina Cobalt oxide improves water oxidation and Kinastowska decreases organic dye degradation on silver phosphate as photocatalyst P5-27 A. M. Steiner Bimetallic Colloids: Merging the Advantages of Silver and Gold Nanocrystals P5-28 Maïssa Farroux Synthesis of nanostructured latexes via mini- emulsion polymerisation in aqueous media, leading to water-resistant, hydrophobic films

61 Poster Session A

P5-29 Andrés Solana Preparing Graphene Quantum Dots: effect of the starting material P5-30 Carmen Cavallo High performance electrode materials based on reduced graphene oxide for application in storage energy devices P5-31 Mariana Removal of organic dyes by magnetic chitosan- Pereira da Silva alginate beads P5-32 Jose M. Formation of stable assembly of gold Carnerero nanoparticles with giant DNA by weak heating P5-33 Guillermo Enhanced Plasmonic Photothermal Therapy via González-Rubio Intracellular pH-Induced Tip-to-Tip Assembly of Gold Nanorods P5-34 Filippo Agresti Paraffin-based nanoencapsulated PCM prepared from solvent-assisted emulsions in water P5-35 Filippo Agresti Surface oxidation of Single Wall Carbon Nanohorns for the production of surfactant free water-based colloids P5-36 Guy Vereecke Effect of nano-confinement on the kinetics of an interfacial click chemistry reaction P5-37 Zhanar Study of the properties of thin films based Ospanova magnetic nanoparticles P5-38 E. Karakatenko Effect of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide on size and morphology hydroxyapatite nanoparticles P5-39 Ioana Oprea Antibacterial polymeric biofilm with colloidal silver nanoparticles P5-40 Werner Steffen When is round round–A light scattering study P5-41 M. A. Deyab Novel nanocomposites based on epoxy and nano sized phthalocyanine for corrosion protection application P5-42 David Pug In-line measurement of colloids by 180° DLS in processes and high-throughput robotics P5-43 Bruno Alonso Polysaccharide-oxide nanocomposites through colloidal assembly P5-44 András Deák Patchy nanoparticle preparation and self- assembly P5-45 Eid M. S Azzam Nano Crystalline Poly (2-aminothiophenol): Synthesis, Characterization and Antibacterial Activity 62 Poster Session A

P5-46 R. Yerushalmi– The role of conformational entropy in Rozen Conjugated Polymers dispersions of Carbon Nanotubes P5-47 Maria A. Plasmon-Enhanced Light Trapping in Ultrathin Kalinina Films of Organic Chromophores

P5-48 Michelle D. Controlled synthesis of multinary sulfide Regulacio nanostructures in solution P5-49 Stefano Lazzari Sintering process of II-VI Semiconductor Nanocrystals P5-50 Bing Hong Aquivion@ as an Efficient Pickering Interface Catalysis for Acid Catalytic Reactions P5-51 Frida Iselau Colloidal stability of hydrophobic nanoparticles in presence of starch P5-52 Dafne Musino Impact of formulation on multi-scale structure and segmental dynamics in simplified industrial nanocomposites P5-53 Marco Alfonso Electrostrictive soft materials for mechanical energy harvesting P5-54 Maria M. Electrorheological properties of clay Ramos-Tejada nanoparticles: influence of size and shape P5-55 Marian Cors Acrylamide based core-shell microgels with linear thermoresponse P5-56 Stefan Lülsdorf Nanostructure of foamable polyol-rich CO2- microemulsions P5-57 A. Michalska Polymer micelles as fluorimetric nanosensors P5-58 Christoph Self-Assembly of Plasmonic Supercrystals and Hanske Metamolecules P5-59 M. Kosmulski Metal-modified porous silicas: a new approach P5-60 T. Palberg Formation of Laves Phases in Repulsive and Attractive Binary Mixtures of Buoyancy Matched Hard Spheres P5-61 E. M. Kutorglo Conductive macroporous materials prepared by controlled assembly of polystyrene/polymer acid-doped polyaniline core/shell type nanoparticles P5-62 Rafael Muñoz- Inorganic Building Units in Hybrid Polymer Espinosa Nanoparticles and Nanocapsules: Controlling Morphology and Functionality 63 Poster Session A

P5-63 J. Feder-Kubis New chiral ionic liquids with natural terpene moiety as template for mesoporous silica nanoparticles for photodynamic therapy P5-64 Valter Molecularly engineered polymer particles for Castelvetro stone protection P5-65 David López- Graphene Oxide nanoplatelets studied by Raman Díaz Spectroscopy P5-66 Irene Russo Understanding protein-nanoparticle interaction: Krauss one step forward the development of biomedical nanosystems P5-67 Jérôme Polyelectrolytes and iron oxide nanoparticles: Fresnais from colloidal stability to aggregation and its role on hyperthermia P5-68 X. Deschanels Are mesoporous silica resistant to radiation damage? P5-69 J. P Chapel Probing the density variation of confined polymer thin films via simple model- independent nanoparticle adsorption P5-70 Romain Bordes Combined nanocellulose and nanoparticles- polyelectrolyte complexes for the hierarchical consolidation of canvas P5-71 Aparicio- The rationale behind the phase inversion Blanco, Juan temperature for the preparation of size-tailored lipid nanocapsules P5-72 Sebastian Süß Separation of semiconductor and metallic nanoparticles using size-exclusion chromatography P5-73 Krzysztof Polyelectrolyte nanocapsules for biomedical Szczepanowicz application P5-74 Szczęch Maria PCL-based nanoparticles as potential candidate for drug delivery to the central nervous system P5-75 Michael Maas Nanoscale Janus particles with dual protein faces P5-76 Chongling Using hydrogel to transfer graphene oxides into Cheng organic media for oil decontamination P5-77 J. M. Lopez- Nanostructuration of alkynyl modified Si Romero surfaces with tripodal oligo(p-phenylene)s P5-78 Aleksandar Mechanism of the formation of gold Chanachev nanoparticles in monolayer environment at the air/liquid interface 64 Poster Session A

P5-79 Peter Georgiev Accelaration effect of metal ions with the smaller reduction potential on the rate of citrate synthesis of noble gold and silver nanoparticles growth P5-80 Silviya Kinetics study of the synthesis of gold Simeonova nanoparticles in the presence of chitosan and citric acid

4th and 5th of September 2017 – 18:50-20:20 “Aulario de Farmacia” T6: Inorganic Colloids and Upconverting Nanomaterials: Synthesis and Applications Nº Name Title P6-1 Anna Patrycja The effect of stabilizers on the formation of Au- Dzimitrowicz Ag core-shell nanostructures by atmospheric pressure glow discharge P6-2 Chul Wee Lee Role of catalyst precursors and the effect of asphaltene concentration during slurry phase hydrocracking of vacuum residue P6-3 B. Sierra-Martín Molecular motion and structure of novel organometallic polymers P6-4 Marco Laurenti Influence of the graphene oxide chemical composition on the quenching efficiency of upconversion nanoparticles for biosensing applications P6-5 Steffen Influence of amino acids on the crystallization of Witzleben calcium silicates hydrates P6-6 Valter Polymer encapsulated nanocalcite as a hybrid Castelvetro stone consolidant

65 Poster Session A 4th and 5th of September 2017 – 18:50-20:20 “Aulario de Farmacia” T8: Theory and Simulation in Colloid and Thin Layer Systems Nº Name Title P8-1 Ewelina Jarek Surface activity of hydrolysable esterquat surfactants; what can we learn from the DFT calculations? P8-2 Matija Tomšič Molecular Dynamics and Small- and Wide-Angle X-Ray Scattering Structural Study of Liquid 1,4- Butanediol P8-3 Alexandra Finite Element Modelling of Thermal Transport Philipp in Colloidal Assemblies P8-4 A. A. Vanin Computer simulation of double electric layer in AOT reverse micelles with and without salt P8-5 Kazuya Okada 3D Monte Carlo simulations on a regime change in the internal structure of the aggregates of magnetic cubic particles P8-6 V. F. D. Peters Phase Behavior of Mixtures of Colloids and Supramolecular Polymers P8-7 Pascal Weak Intramolecular Complexation within Star- Hebbeker like Copolymers: A Generic Model P8-8 N. A. Volkov All-atom simulations of SDS micellar solutions: aggregation and diffusion

66 Poster Session B

6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T2: Liquid Interfaces, Air-liquid Interfaces, Membranes, Films and Emulsions: Structure, Dynamics and Elasticity Nº Name Title P2-1 Lydia M Limited coalescence and Ostwald ripening in Dimitrova emulsions stabilized by hydrophobin HFBII and milk proteins P2-2 Marcin Effects of the incorporation of polycyclic Broniatowski aromatic hydrocarbons on the structure and physical properties of model membranes of soil bacteria P2-3 Anna Taraba The properties of water-alcohol solutions of quercetin and rutin P2-4 Karin Schillén On the Formation of Inclusion Complexes at the Solid/Liquid Interface of Anchored Temperature Responsive PNIPAAM Diblock Copolymers with γ-Cyclodextrin P2-5 Young-A Son Design, Synthesis and Properties of Novel Thermochromic Molecules Based on Fluoran Moieties P2-6 Fatemeh Eslam Meniscus Depth in Capillaries under the Influence of Gravity P2-7 Karel Conformational behavior of graft copolymers in Procházka selective solvents and their sorption on lyophobic surface P2-8 Zdeněk Samec Hydrophobicity of acetylcholine and related ions examined using ion transfer voltammetry at a polarized ionic liquid membrane P2-9 Marie-Charlotte Spontaneous adsorption of microgels at model Tatry liquid interfaces and link with Pickering emulsion stabilized thereof Christian Appel Monolayers of PBA Homopolymers and PEG-PBA Diblock Copolymers at the Air/Water Interface: P2-10 Isothermal Compression and Structure Formation during Collapse

67 Poster Session B

P2-11 Virginia Vadillo Evaluating the influence of surface topography Rodríguez on bacterial adhesion using spatially organized microtopographic surface patterns P2-12 Piotr Effect of cationic surfactant structure on Warszynski formation of complexes with oppositely charged polyelectrolytes P2-13 Donguk Suh Molecular Dynamics Simulation on Seed Curvature Effect of Heterogeneous Droplet, Bubble and Crystal Nucleation P2-14 Bauyrzhan Research of Emulsifying Capacity of Novel Sarsenbekuly Functional Polymers under High Salinity and High Temperature P2-15 Michał Interactions between parabens and membrane Flasiński lipids in monolayers at the air/aqueous solution interface P2-16 Michał Behavior of plant hormones in the model Flasiński environment of plant and human lipid membranes P2-17 Helena Mateos Natural molecules to protect membranes against dehydration: Osmolytes and dehydrin proteins P2-18 Marcel Werner Investigation of the Osmotic Deswelling of Polystyrene Microgels by Polymer Addition P2-19 Nadya Politova Factors affecting the stability of water-oil-water emulsion films P2-20 Katarzyna Hąc- The effect of temperature on the incorporation of Wydro limonene-natural food additive-into lipid membranes P2-21 Paweł Wydro Comparison of the effect of two ecological pesticides and food additives: Eucalyptol and terpinen-4-ol on lipid membranes P2-22 Aidarova S.B Study of thermodynamic bases to encapsulate an active agent P2-23 Anita Wnętrzak Influence of oxysterols on membrane lipids

P2-24 Anita Wnętrzak Surface Properties of Triblock Semifluorinated n- Alkanes P2-25 Michael Ludwig Manipulation of Structural Forces via Temperature

68 Poster Session B

P2-26 Borislava Influence of the hydrodynamic conditions, Damyanova surfactant type and surfactant concentration on solution foaminess P2-27 Yifeng Cao Boundary lubricants prepared from mixtures of saturated and unsaturated phosphatidylcholine lipids: Lubrication and self-healing P2-28 Marzena Mach Triesters of phosphatidylcholine as a potential antibacterial drug -the impact of EPOPC on model bacterial membranes P2-29 Karolina Węder The influence of 2-hydroxyoleic acid on the properties of artificial lipid membranes P2-30 A. Szcześ Magnetic water treatment P2-31 A. Trybala Interactions of foam with thin and thick porous materials P2-32 Derkach S. Kinetics of isothermal crystallization of water droplets in water-in-crude oil concentrated emulsions P2-33 Jennifer Cook Probing and Optimising Sponge P2-34 Montserrat Effect of Palm-P6-2, an E2-GBV-C derived Pujol peptide, on phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine model membranes P2-35 Diana M. Effect on the surface tension of bovine serum Galindres albumin and lipase from porcine pancreas in the presence of water soluble sulfonated resorcin[4]arenes P2-36 Gerardo Immobilization of enzymes by overcoating using Palazzo an atmospheric pressure plasma-deposited polyethylene-like film P2-37 Natalía Modified ion-exchange membranes: correlation Kononenko between porous structure characteristics and electrotransport properties P2-38 Svetlana Investigation of selectivity and structure of Shkirskaya hydrate complex fixed ion–counter ion of modified perfluorinated membranes P2-39 Klemen Bohinc Bacterial adhesion on dental surfaces

P2-40 Almira Polyaniline based Ramanaviciene electrochemical/electrochromic sensors 69 Poster Session B

P2-41 Inga Melnyk Adhesion behavior of thermoresponsive PNIPAM-PDMAEMA brushes P2-42 Denitsa Bending elasticity, edge tension and capacitance Mitkova of cell-mimetic membranes and the effect of sugars P2-43 Joanna Comparison of some sugar surfactants Krawczyk properties to those of classical ones

P2-44 Sonia Losada Interfacial concentrations of phenolic Barreiro antioxidants in edible oil emulsions: effects of acidity and surfactant concentrations P2-45 Alexandre M. Spreading and contraction of a benzene lens on Emelyanenko water: a description on the basis of the disjoining pressure P2-46 Alican Gençer Control of the deposition and the optical properties of cellulose nanocrystal films P2-47 A. Santamaria- The effect of chain extension step in the Echart synthesis of waterborne polyurethane-urea dispersions P2-48 Marcin Persistent organic pollutants in model bacterial Broniatowski membranes–studies of the mechanisms of POP- phospholipid interactions and phospholipase activation P2-49 Vladimír Noise analysis of ion transfer across a Mareček liquid/liquid interface P2-50 Salomé Mielke Nonlinear Viscoelasticity of semifluorinated mesoscopic surface domains: an interfacial rheology study P2-51 Boryan Radoev Double layer electrostatics of heterogeneous surfaces with circle phase contours P2-52 Marine Impacts of solvent composition and thermo- Moussier mechanical treatments on whey protein conformation and interfacial properties in dairy cream emulsion P2-53 Banc, A. Gliadins at the air-water interface P2-54 Marion Roullet Droplets in emulsion gels: from fillers to networks P2-55 Diego R. Interaction of amino acid-based surfactants with Perinelli lipid bilayers: effect of polar heads 70 Poster Session B

P2-56 M. Koroleva Drug loaded emulsions stabilized by SiO2 and Fe3O4 nanoparticles P2-57 Lara H. Moleiro Aescin preference to confined lipid monolayers P2-58 Peter H. New applications of Imaging Ellipsometry at the Thiesen liquid/gas and liquid/liquid interface P2-59 Philipp Erni Interfacial Rheology for the Design of Core/Shell Capsules: Coacervate/Polyurea Membranes at the Oil/Water Interface P2-60 Jan Langmaier Voltammetric studies and polarized ionic liquid membrane: Reaction of biguanide drugs with methylglyoxal P2-61 Björn Ion Pairing and Adsorption of Sunset Braunschweig Yellow/CTAB Mixtures at the Air-Water Interface P2-62 Anna-Karin Formation, physicochemical and interfacial study Hellström of carbamate surfactants P2-63 Victoria Latza Neutron Reflectometry Reveals Structural Aspects of Blood Protein Adsorption to Polymer Brushes P2-64 D. Horinek Solvent/water solubilized by ethanol: the anomalous re-entrant emulsification effect observed with moderate centrifugal fields revisited P2-65 Christopher Influence of oils on the efficiency of surfactants Hill used in fire-fighting foam formulations P2-66 Adam Czajka Surfactants at the Design Limit P2-67 Steffen B Simultaneous stress and weight measurements Fischer for particulate films made from capillary suspensions P2-68 Ulrike S. van Linking interfacial properties to emulsion der Schaaf microstructure:Understanding the relationship between molecular structure of polymeric emulsifiers and emulsion stability P2-69 Tomer Detailed Balance in Polar Fluids Markovich P2-70 Karel Conformational behavior of graft copolymers in Prochazka selective solvents and their sorption on P2-71 Lidija Petrovic Emulsifying properties of Chitosan/Sodium lauryl sulfate system 71 Poster Session B

6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T4: Wetting and Superhydrophobic Surfaces Nº Name Title P4-1 Joanna The influence of biosurfactant film on adhesion Krawczyk of water to hydrophobic solids P4-2 Anna Rhamnose and sucrose as a model of hydrophilic Zdziennicka part of some natural surfactants P4-3 Anna Prediction of apolar and monopolar polymers Zdziennicka wetting by aqueous solution of some P4-4 Bronisław Usefulness of different kinds of approaches to Jańczuk the interface tension for some surfactant

P4-5 Bronisław Dependence between kind of solids and Jańczuk properties of natural surfactant films P4-6 Heng-Kwong Extraordinarily Rapid Rise of Tiny Bubbles Tsao Sliding beneath Superhydrophobic Surfaces

P4-7 Yu-Jane Sheng Meniscus Shape and Wetting Competition of a Drop between a Cone and a Plane P4-8 Hsueh-Peng Modeling contact angle of a liquid droplet sitting Chuang on a cosine wave-like square-array pattern surface with different surface roughnesses P4-9 Michele Ferrari Antifouling amphiphobic coatings for protection in sea environment P4-10 Udita Ringania Surface adhesion enhancement on superhydrophobic surfaces P4-11 I. Kaplanow Tunable Aqueous Polymer Phase Impregnated Resins: Contact angle as prediction parameter for impregnation P4-12 Ludmila Colloid chemistry approaches for enhancing the Boinovich anti-icing potential of superhydrophobic coatings P4-13 Xiaohua Liu Three-dimensional numerical study on droplet dynamic characteristics during oblique impacting onto super-hydrophobic Spherical surfaces 72 Poster Session B

P4-14 Alexander B. Mimicking a lotus leaf ultra hydrophobicity at Tesler home: a facile method to prepare mechanically durable superhydrophobic titanium P4-15 Celso Aparecido Exploiting the stability of the slippery Beltran polyaniline rough surface impregnated with fluorinated oil

6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T7: Hydration and Ion Specific Effects Nº Name Title P7-1 Emanuel Tight cohesion between glycolipid membranes Schneck results from balanced water–headgroup interactions P7-2

P7-3 Anbumozhi Modification of Surface Interactions by Angayarkanni Liposome-Bearing PEO layer P7-4 Tadeja Janc High field NMR and relaxometry studies of salt- specific effects in bovine serum albumin and lysozyme solutions P7-5 Mirco Wahab Capillary Forces and Volume Change in Materials with Slit Micropores P7-6 Johan Electrolyte effects on the interactions between Bergenholtz colloidal spheres bearing surface grafted polymer

73 Poster Session B 6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T9: Advances in Methods of Imaging and Characterization of Colloidal Systems Nº Name Title P9-1 Panagiota Bogri Phase behavior and dynamics of concentrated suspensions of soft semi-permeable colloids P9-2 Yi Liu EUSMI: European infrastructure for spectroscopy, scattering and imaging of soft matter P9-3 Cristina Coman Raman mapping: a tool for imaging nano-and microstructures after cellular uptake P9-4 Dmytro Confocal microscopy of the interactions of Dedovets objects with a solidification interface P9-5 Roland Ramsch Thermal stability evaluation of cosmetic products by optical thermal analysis P9-6 D. Gaudino A Light Scattering Investigation on the Structure Factor of Concentrated Microgel Suspensions P9-7 Yoann Lefeuvre Fast flow curve determination by microfluidic optical rheometer P9-8 Inga Melnyk Mechanical characterization and adhesion properties of microcapsules P9-9 Peter H. Imaging Mueller Matrix Ellipsometry for Thiesen Isotropy/Anisotropy Imaging P9-10 F. Ortega-Ojeda Study of β-galactosidase-silica support interactions using IR and Raman data fusion P9-11 Panagiota Bogri Rheological properties and microscopic dynamics of concentrated core-shell microgels with tunable interactions

74 Poster Session B 6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 Basement of “Aulario de Farmacia” T10: Transport Phenomena in Colloidal Systems, Microdroplets and Microfluidics Nº Name Title P10-1 Valerie Microfluidic-based preparation of hyaluronic Ravaine acid microgels for enzymatic-triggered release of hydrophobic drugs P10-2 Marco Microfluidic synthesis of drug-loaded PLGA NPs Bramosanti for plant therapy: a novel approach by using plant defense elicitors P10-3 Ayantika Sett Flow Dynamics of Healthy and Deformed Red Blood Cells in a Microchannel P10-4 Alexandra Binary Colloidal Mixtures: Influence of the Order Philipp on the Thermal Conductivity P10-5 Anatoly Calculation of Electric Conductivity of Ion- Filippov Exchange Membrane by the Cell Method P10-6 Simon Application of the Onsager reciprocal relation to Gourdin-Bertin the electro-acoustic coupling P10-7 Joshua Droplet generation with quasi 2D flow Ricouvier P10-8 Bruno F. B. Soft self-assembled nanostructured Silva nanoparticles for gene and drug delivery P10-9 Martina Transport of metal ions in hydrogels containing Klucakova humic acids as active complexation agent

75 Poster Session B 6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T11: Medical, Pharmaceutical and Industrial Applications of Colloids Nº Name Title P11-1 Chong Hun Dissolution of Iron Chromium Oxide by Jung Decontaminating Agent for a Foam Decontamination P11-2 Hélène Labie Engineering the structure of biopolymer microgels for the controlled release of proteins microgels P11-3 Urszula Kinetic stability of oil-in-water nanoemulsions Bazylińska prepared by ultrasound technology using biodegradable amphoteric surfactants P11-4 Ádám Juhász Binding of drugs and metal complexes onto biomimetic interfaces

P11-5 Yoshiaki Selective Bactericidal Activity of Divalent Metal Yamamoto Salts of Lauric Acid

P11-6 Paul Joyce Nanostructured spray-dried clay particles adsorb lipid digestion products during lipolysis of triglycerides: potential treatment for obesity P11-7 Sarah Michel New chitosan-based microgels for internal wound healing therapies P11-8 Paz Sevilla Differences in the binding of the fibrillogenic peptide hormone somatostatin-14 on plasmonic nanoparticles addressed by physicochemical conditions P11-9 Irene Anton Nanocapsules as a Drug Delivery system for Endothelial Progenitor Cells’ secretomes P11-10 Torrado J. J. Pellets with Amphotericin B micellar dispersion for oral administration P11-11 Océane Alliod Production of controlled and reliable novel emulsions for skin care applications with membrane processes P11-12 Aidarova S.B Study of properties of natural adsorbents using for the triclosan treatment 76 Poster Session B

P11-13 Jaroslav Composites of glucan microparticles with Hanu curcumin targeted to treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases P11-14 Pierandrea Innovative eco-compatible approaches for shale Lo Nostro gas extraction P11-15 Aristotelis Non-ionic water-in-oil microemulsions as Xenakis vehicles for enzyme drug delivery: the model case of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) P11-16 A. Maldonado New ruthenium complexes as dyes for dye- Valdivia sensitized solar cells P11-17 Julia Lucas Influence of silicon in calcium phosphate Aparicio cements on the formation of nanopores P11-18 Carmen Brushite hybrid prepared with aqueous extract Rueda of Hibiscus sabdariffa Rodríguez P11-19 Aleksandra Application of thin-layer wicking method for Szcześ surface free energy determination of commercial and biological hydroxyapatite P11-20 Aristotelis Development of O/W nanoemulsions as carriers Xenakis of vitamin D: A structural study P11-21 Natsuki Development of model lipid membranes based Akakabe on non-hydroxy phytosphingosine for the studies of skin barrier properties P11-22 Antonia Isolation and quantification of peripheral Mallardi Extracellular Vesicles P11-23 Elżbieta Nanoformulations based on essential oil as a Sikora modern form of fungicide P11-24 W. Piasecki The application of ion selective electrode to monit or calcium adsorption from solution onto metal oxides particles P11-25 Arunas Glucose Biosensors Based on Electrochemically Ramanaviciu Deposited Polymer Layers s P11-26 Torbjörn Layer-by-layer system based on Cellulose Pettersson Nanofibrils for capture and release of cancer cells in microfluidic device P11-27 Ana Belen Effect of protein corona on the immunological Jódar-Reyes specificity of functionalized lipid nanocapsules

77 Poster Session B

P11-28 Torbjörn Slipdisc: A versatile platform for point of care Pettersson diagnostics

P11-29 Magdalena Polymeric nanocarriers loaded with Piętka-Ottlik organoselenium compounds: fabrication and antimicrobial evaluation P11-30 M. R. Noor El- A new generation of cutting oil: triple Din nanoemulsion potentiates the effect of machine cutting performance and its stability P11-31 Hans Tromp Controllable particles from proteins insoluble in water P11-32 Marie-Carole Associative natural systems with antibacterial Kouassi and antioxidant properties based on polysaccharides and aminoguaiacol P11-33 Marc Silica nanoparticles assembly at the liquid-liquid Hébrant interface to improve the selectivity of the electrochemical extraction of active molecules P11-34 Ali Sedaghat Formulation of a natural antimicrobial agent: Doost food grade essential oil nanoemulsions with long-term stability containing a natural surfactant

78 Poster Session B 6th of September 2017 – 14:00-17:00 “Aulario de Farmacia” T12: Colloids out of Equilibrium and Active Matter Nº Name Title P12-1 Chang-Soo Lee Directed self-assembly of patchy hexagram particles at the air-water interface P12-2 C. Barth Conductance measurements in Laponite- stabilized inner nanostructured emulsions in water P12-3 Tianchi Cao Heteroaggregation of oppositely charged particles in the presence of multivalent ions P12-4 D.N. ten Napel Colloidal self-propelled rotators P12-5 Hauke Self-assembly in a colloidal system with tunable Carstensen magnetic interactions P12-6 Valentina Unconventional Behaviour of Soft Multi- Nigro Responsive Microgels P12-7 Joshua Superparamagnetic Microswimmers driven by Ricouvier a Rotating Magnetic Field P12-8 Diego F. Rheological properties of isolated telechelic star Jaramillo-Cano polymers P12-9 Sumit Mehan Unraveling the mechanisms for assembly and disassembly of dense complex of inorganic charged nanoparticles and polyelectrolytes of opposite charges in the regime of very high ionic strength

79 Social Dinner

El Pardo is a Royal Place located in the northern suburb of Madrid, close to the Manzanares River. The oldest written reference of El Pardo Forest dates from 1312 being King of Castile and Leon Alfonso XI. The abundant presence of hunting and proximity to the town of Madrid made El Pardo a hunting ground during the Middle and Modern age. The construction of the first pavilion of hunting by order of the King Enrique III of Castile gave the Royal name. Although it was not until 1547, when the Emperor Carlos ordered to replace the pavilion by a palace. On 1604, a large fire destroyed much of the building and King Felipe III commissioned his restoration to Francisco de Mora. At the same time, the Convent of Capuchinos was built in El Pardo, where the Cristo Yacente carved by Gregorio Hernandez stands out. In the reign of Carlos III, El Pardo ceased to be a mere hunting zone and began to build homes for the use of employees of the real place, the base of the future town. It was the Italian architect Francisco Sabatini who concluded the total renovation of the palace in 1772 acquiring the aspect that it has today. After the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), the Palace of El Pardo was the residence of General Franco when he was head of the Spanish State. Nowadays, the Palace is used as residence for foreign Head of State visiting Madrid. The residence of the current King of Spain Felipe VI is the Palace of Zarzuela, which is also located in the El Pardo Mountain near the Royal Palace of El Pardo. The restaurant El Torreón is located in one of the highest hills of El Pardo, a really privileged place with over 50 years of history and only 15 minutes away from Madrid.

80 Sponsors

Ferroni Foundation Fondazione Prof. Enzo Ferroni Onlus c/o CSGI Via della Lastruccia, 3 50019 Sesto Fiorentino (FI) Italia [email protected]

Universidad Complutense de Madrid Avenida de Seneca, 2 28040, Madrid, España www.ucm.es

Facultad de Farmacia Universidad Complutense de Madrid Plaza Ramon y Cajal 2 28040, Madrid, España http://farmacia.ucm.es

Elsevier Raforweg 29 1043NX Amsterdam, The Netherlands www.elsevier.com

81 Sponsors

Collaborative Research Center 1194 Interaction between Transport and Wetting Processes Technische Universität Darmstadt Karolinenplatz 5 64289 Darmstadt, Germany

CoWet Marie Curie Initial Training Network Technische Universität Darmstadt Institute for Fluid Mechanics and Aerodynamics Darmstadt, Germany http://cowet.eu

Real Sociedad Española de Física Facultad de Ciencias Físicas. UCM. Plaza de las Ciencias, 1 [email protected]

Lubricant impregnated slippery surfaces Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research Ackermannweg 10 55128 Mainz, Germany http://www.lubiss.eu

Langmuir American Chemical Society Editor-in-Chief: Françoise Winnik [email protected] http://pubs.acs.org/journal/langd5/

82 Sponsors

Soft Matter Royal Society of Chemistry Editor-in-Chief: Darrin Pochan http://www.rsc.org/journals- books-databases/about- journals/soft-matter/#boards-staff

Polymers Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute St. Alban-Anlage 66, 4052 Basel, Switzerland http://www.mdpi.com/journal/polymers

iesmat [email protected] C/ Caléndula 95 Parque Empresarial Miniparc II 28109 Alcobendas, Madrid – España http://www.iesmat.com

LS Instruments AG Passage du Cardinal 1 CH-1700 Fribourg [email protected] http://www.lsinstruments.ch

Biolin Scientific Holding AB Stockholm, Sweden [email protected] http://www.biolinscientific.com

83 Sponsors

Anton Paar C/ Montsià 4, Parc de Negocis Mas Blau I El Prat de Llobregat, 08820, Spain http://www.anton-paar.com/mx-es/

JOVER Química/LUM Pol. Industrial Can Petit Av. Font i Sagué, 9B Nau 8bis 08227 Terrassa, Barcelona http://cqjover.com

XENOCS 19 rue François Blumet 38360 Sassenage, France [email protected] www.xenocs.com

ACS OMEGA American Chemical Society http://pubs.acs.org/journal/acsodf

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