Taylor & Francis Group, 2012. — 464 p.
In the past several decades, molecular self-assembly has emerged as one of the main themes in chemistry, biology, and materials science. This book compiles and details cutting-edge research in molecular assemblies ranging from self-organized peptide nanostructures and DNA-chromophore foldamers to supramolecular systems and metal-directed assemblies, even to nanocrystal superparticles and self-assembled microdevices.
Toward Intelligent Materials
E And Z Secondary Amides in Supramolecular Nanotubes and Nanospheres
Control of Chiral Assemblies Through Hydrogen Bondings for Helical Architectures
The Self-Assembly of Lipophilic Guanosine Derivatives
Self-Assemblies, Folding, and Properties of Perylene Monomers, Oligomers, and Polymers
Superamphiphiles for Controlled Self-assembly and Disassembly
Well-Defined Porphyrin Architectures from Self-Assembly and Dewetting
Photophysics and Photochemistry of Molecular Recognition and Sensing with Metal-Directed Macrocyclic Systems
Pt/Pd–Ethynyl Bond Containing Fluorescent Molecular Architectures as Sensors for Nitroaromatics
Pd(II) and Pt(II) Metal-Directed Self-Assembly of Supramolecular Structures Based on N-Monoalkyl-4,4¢ -Bipyridinium Derivatives
Colloidal Superparticles from Artificial Atoms
Functional Microstructures by Self-Assembly