Hydrogen-bonding regulated assembly of molecular and macromolecular amphiphiles

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Abstract

Amphiphilic small molecules and polymers produce diverse nanostructures in an aqueous medium. Emerging reports suggest that there is a great opportunity to enrich the structure and function of amphiphilic aggregates by suitable molecular engineering in the building block to enable directional non-covalent interaction based on specific molecular recognition to circumvent the immiscibility driven aggregation governed by the critical packing parameter. This review discusses representative recent examples on self-assembly of small molecule and polymeric amphiphiles by H-bonding interaction in an aqueous medium. The specific impact of H-bonding on regulating morphology, stability, dynamics, thermodynamics, surface functional group display, stimuli-responsiveness and precision of amphiphilic nanostructures has been highlighted and correlated with their potential application as supramolecular biomaterials.

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Sikder, A., & Ghosh, S. (2019, December 1). Hydrogen-bonding regulated assembly of molecular and macromolecular amphiphiles. Materials Chemistry Frontiers. Royal Society of Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9qm00473d

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