
Steve Granick
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst · Materials Science and Engineering
Active 1938–2026
About
Steve Granick is the Robert K. Barrett Professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the Department of Polymer Science and Engineering. His current research projects include active polymers, molecules in extreme environments, biological intelligence, and memory of non-neural cells. As a faculty member, he is involved in advancing the understanding of complex polymer systems and their applications, contributing to the fields of polymer science and engineering.
Research topics
- Chemistry
Selected publications
Observation of chemically-driven force fluctuations in an optical trap
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) · 2026-01-02
datasetOpen accessSenior authorThis dataset includes measurements involving optical tweezers, NMR, and controls to support the paper "Observation of Chemically-Driven Force Fluctuations in an Optical Trap." The data files can be opened using text, Mestrenova, or Excel.
Observation of chemically-driven force fluctuations in an optical trap
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) · 2026-01-02
datasetOpen accessSenior authorThis dataset includes measurements involving optical tweezers, NMR, and controls to support the paper "Observation of Chemically-Driven Force Fluctuations in an Optical Trap." The data files can be opened using text, Mestrenova, or Excel.
Electric spiking activity in epithelial cells
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2025-03-17 · 7 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingEpithelial cells (human keratinocyte cells and the canine MDCK cell line), traditionally viewed as electrically non-self-excitable and involved primarily in physiological functions such as barrier presentation, absorption, secretion, and protection, are shown here to exhibit traveling extracellular electric charge when they recover from spatially focused, laser-induced wounding of confluent monolayers cultured on a multielectrode array chip. Voltage spikes measured on these electrodes display depolarization, repolarization, and hyperpolarization phases with amplitudes similar to the action potentials of neurons but with the markedly slower duration of 1 to 2 s. Some propagate distances up to hundreds of μm from the wound with a mean speed of around 10 mm s −1 . Generation and transmission of bioelectric signals are significantly influenced by the perturbation of mechanosensitive cationic ion channels. These direct measurements confirm bioelectric signaling that previous work has hypothesized to regulate epithelial cell development and may have relevance to the frequency parameter selection of bioelectric devices.
Aqueous Ion Mobility over a Broad Concentration Range
Physical Review Letters · 2025-06-11 · 2 citations
articleFor concentrations between dilute and the highly concentrated limit of almost 5 M, we compare our explicit-water molecular dynamics simulations of LiH_{2}PO_{4} (which dissociates into H_{2}PO_{4}^{-} anions relevant to biochemical processes and Li^{+} cations relevant to battery technology) to our pulsed-field gradient NMR measurements of ion diffusion, and find compensation between electrostatic and osmotic forces. The significance is that, noticing that the Kirkwood equation holds when using its exact solution but seemingly is violated when making the traditional approximation of using total force relaxation time in place of the memory relaxation time, we explain slower translational diffusion with increasing ion concentration as a dynamical effect arising from growing memory relaxation time. Physically, 2 orders of magnitude separate the timescales of electrostatic and osmotic forces from the total force such that dynamical correlations between force components lead to concentration-independent total force variance and force relaxation time.
2025-03-17
preprintSenior authorThe ergodicity question when imaging DNA conformation using liquid cell electron microscopy
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2024-01-09 · 10 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingAssessing the ergodicity of graphene liquid cell electron microscope measurements, we report that loop states of circular DNA interconvert reversibly and that loop numbers follow the Boltzmann distribution expected for this molecule in bulk solution, provided that the electron dose is low (80-keV electron energy and electron dose rate 1–20 e − Å −2 s −1 ). This imaging technique appears to act as a “slow motion” camera that reveals equilibrated distributions by imaging the time average of a few molecules without the need to image a spatial ensemble.
Fourier Law Fidelity Contrasted by Infrared Imaging as Heat Flows through Metals and Polymers
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C · 2024-07-19 · 1 citations
articleSenior authorCorrespondingUsing a home-built imaging system to map by infrared detection the surface temperature of a metallic material, we fail to confirm the generality of previously reported deviations, for translucent polymers and quartz, from Fourier’s law at the macroscale. This discrepancy is explained by the fact that unlike polymers and quartz, metals are optically opaque. Comparing the environments of air and vacuum quantitatively, we show the advantage of the latter environment. Of special interest is that thermal gradients reveal surface features otherwise concealed under uniform temperature conditions. Our findings not only confirm the classical heat conduction model for metal but also highlight the often-overlooked impact of material optical properties on thermal behavior.
Exceptions to Fourier’s law at the macroscale
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2024-03-05 · 6 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingThe usual basis to analyze heat transfer within materials is the equation formulated 200 years ago, Fourier's law, which is identical mathematically to the mass diffusion equation, Fick's law. Revisiting this assumption regarding heat transport within translucent materials, performing the experiments in vacuum to avoid air convection, we compare the model predictions to infrared-based measurements with nearly mK temperature resolution. After heat pulses, we find macroscale non-Gaussian tails in the surface temperature profile. At steady state, we find macroscale anomalous hot spots when the sample is topographically rough, and this is validated by using two additional independent methods to measure surface temperature. These discrepancies from Fourier's law for translucent materials suggest that internal radiation whose mean-free-path is millimeters interacts with defects to produce small heat sources that by secondary emission afford an additional, non-local mode of heat transport. For these polymer and inorganic glass materials, this suggests unique strategies of heat management design.
Solid-body trajectoids shaped to roll along desired pathways
Nature · 2023-08-09 · 11 citations
articlePhosphorescent extensophores expose elastic nonuniformity in polymer networks
Nature Communications · 2023-02-01 · 11 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingNetworks and gels are soft elastic solids of tremendous technological importance that consist of cross-linked polymers whose structure and connectivity at the molecular level are fundamentally nonuniform. Pre-failure local mechanical responses are not understood at the level of individual crosslinks, despite the enormous attention given to their macroscopic mechanical responses and to developing optical probes to detect their loci of mechanical failure. Here, introducing the extensophore concept to measure nondestructive forces using an optical probe with continuous force readout proportional to deformation, we show that the crosslinks in an elastic polymer network extend, fluctuate, and deform with a wide range of molecular individuality. Requiring little specialized equipment, this foundational single-molecule phosphorescence approach, applied here to polymer science and engineering, can be useful to a broad science and engineering community.
Recent grants
Polymer Dynamics at Surfaces and in Complex Media
NSF · $366k · 2006–2010
In Situ Imaging and Spectroscopy of Tribological Contacts
NSF · $318k · 2006–2011
Rotation Diffusion of MOON Particles
NSF · $312k · 2009–2013
Polymer Dynamics at Interfaces and in Complex Environments
NSF · $790k · 2009–2015
Frequent coauthors
- 132 shared
Sung Chul Bae
Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology
- 62 shared
Yoon‐Kyoung Cho
Seoul National University
- 46 shared
Stephen M. Anthony
Sandia National Laboratories California
- 41 shared
Erik Luijten
Northwestern University
- 35 shared
Yingxi Zhu
- 34 shared
Tsvi Tlusty
Institute for Basic Science
- 34 shared
Huan Wang
Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences
- 28 shared
Jing Yan
Yale University
Labs
Develop and exploit simple, creative, and novel design paradigms that will change the way scientists, engineers, and the general public use and understand materials.
Education
- 1982
Ph.D., Physics
University of California, Berkeley
- 1977
B.S., Physics
University of California, Los Angeles
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