4.8 Article

Macroscopic Supramolecular Assembly of Rigid Building Blocks Through a Flexible Spacing Coating

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Engineering, Biomedical

Directed self-assembly of microscale hydrogels by electrostatic interaction

Yu Long Han et al.

BIOFABRICATION (2013)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

DNA-directed self-assembly of shape-controlled hydrogels

Hao Qi et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2013)

Review Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Multivalency as a Chemical Organization and Action Principle

Carlo Fasting et al.

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION (2012)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Photoswitchable gel assembly based on molecular recognition

Hiroyasu Yamaguchi et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2012)

Article Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Water-Enabled Self-Healing of Polyelectrolyte Multilayer Coatings

Xu Wang et al.

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION (2011)

Article Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Macroscopic self-assembly through molecular recognition

Akira Harada et al.

NATURE CHEMISTRY (2011)

Article Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Dynamic Microcrystal Assembly by Nitroxide Exchange Reactions

Birte Schulte et al.

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION (2010)

Editorial Material Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Thither supramolecular chemistry?

J. Fraser Stoddart

NATURE CHEMISTRY (2009)

Article Chemistry, Physical

Spontaneous assembly of viruses on multilayered polymer surfaces

PJ Yoo et al.

NATURE MATERIALS (2006)

Article Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

A model for describing the thermodynamics of multivalent host-guest interactions at interfaces

J Huskens et al.

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY (2004)

Article Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

Scaffolds for tissue fabrication

Peter X. Ma

MATERIALS TODAY (2004)

Review Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Molecule-mimetic chemistry and mesoscale self-assembly

NB Bowden et al.

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH (2001)

Article Engineering, Biomedical

Scaffold design and fabrication technologies for engineering tissues - state of the art and future perspectives

DW Hutmacher

JOURNAL OF BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE-POLYMER EDITION (2001)