Self-organizing precipitation processes, such as chemical gardens forming biomimetic micro-and nanotubular forms, have the potential to show us new fundamental science to explore, quantify, and understand nonequilibrium physicochemical systems, and shed light on the conditions for lifeʼs emergence. The physics and chemistry of these phenomena, due to the assembly of material architectures under a flux of ions, and their exploitation in applications, have recently been termed chemobrionics. Advances in understanding in this area require a combination of expertise in physics, chemistry, mathematical modeling, biology, and nanoengineering, as well as in complex systems and nonlinear and materials sciences, giving rise to this new synergistic discipline of chemobrionics.
CITATION STYLE
Cardoso, S. S. S., Cartwright, J. H. E., Čejková, J., Cronin, L., Wit, A. D., Giannerini, S., … Tóth, Á. (2020). Chemobrionics: From self-assembled material architectures to the origin of life. Artificial Life, 26(3), 315–326. https://doi.org/10.1162/artl_a_00323
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