Results 181 to 190 of about 284,523 (293)

Hydrogelation via Supramolecular Copolymerization of Structural Water within Adaptive Metal–Organic Fibers

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
Structural water is harnessed as an active co‐monomer to drive supramolecular polymerization in bulk water. Zinc(II) Salphen complexes confine water molecules to form hollow, metal–organic nanofibers that assemble into adaptive hydrogels with thermoresponsive mechanics and selective chiral recognition.
Merlin R. Stühler   +10 more
wiley   +1 more source

Low-Temperature Electron Spin Resonance Study of MnPS3 Antiferromagnetic Single Crystal. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces
Moro F   +4 more
europepmc   +1 more source

A Nano‐Interception Strategy for Chronic Heart Failure: Prussian Blue Nanoparticles Disrupt Fibroblast‐Immune Communication via CCL2 Sequestration

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
A nano‐interception strategy disrupts pathogenic fibroblast–macrophage crosstalk in chronic heart failure. Scalable Prussian blue nanoparticles selectively sequester CCL2 via ultrahigh‐affinity binding, preventing CCR2+ macrophage recruitment and breaking a key fibro‐inflammatory circuit. This approach demonstrates robust efficacy in murine and porcine
Bo Chen   +16 more
wiley   +1 more source

Broadband Electron Spin Resonance Study in a Sr2FeMoO6 Double Perovskite. [PDF]

open access: yesACS Omega, 2020
Das R   +3 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Ligand‐Mediated Surface Carrier Modulation in Perovskite Nanocrystals for Charge‐Symmetric LEDs

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
A hydrolysis‐assisted ligand exchange strategy enables surface carrier modulation of perovskite nanocrystals using a multifunctional π‐conjugated ligand. This molecular surface design achieves charge balance and recombination‐zone symmetry in light‐emitting diodes (LEDs), which leads to high‐efficiency perovskite LEDs and establishes a general platform
Jongho Park   +11 more
wiley   +1 more source

2D Nanomaterials Toward Function‐Ready Superlubricity in Advanced Microsystems

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
A unified framework links structural and transformation superlubricity with microsystem functions and deployment requirements. Mechanisms, device architectures, integration strategies, AI‐guided discovery, and benchmarking protocols are connected to define function‐ready superlubricity in advanced microsystems.
Yushan Geng, Jun Yang, Yong Yang
wiley   +1 more source

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