Applying Biological Principles to the Assembly and Selection of Chemical Superstructures

LM Greig, Douglas Philp

Research output: Other contribution

Abstract

It has become clear over the past two decades that, in order to create functional synthetic nanoscale structures, the chemist must exploit a fundamental understanding of the self-assembly of large-scale biological structures, which exist and function at and beyond the nanoscale. This mode of construction of nanoscale structures and nanosystems represents the so-called 'bottom-up' or 'engineering-up' approach to fabrication. Significant progress has been made in the development of nanoscience by transferring concepts found in the biological world into the chemical arena. The development of simple chemical systems that are capable of instructing their own organisation into large aggregates of molecules through their mutual recognition properties has been central to this success. By utilising a diverse array of intermolecular interactions as the information source for assembly processes, chemists have successfully applied biological concepts in the construction of complex nanoscale structures and superstructures with a variety of forms and functions. More recently, the utility of assembly processes has been extended through the realisation that recognition processes can be used to select a single structure from a library of equilibrating structures. These developments open the way for the design and implementation of artificial assembly processes that are capable of adapting themselves to the local environment in which they are conducted.

Original languageEnglish
Volume30
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2001

Keywords

  • DIELS-ALDER REACTION
  • DYNAMIC COMBINATORIAL LIBRARIES
  • MOLECULAR ELECTRONIC DEVICE
  • RECOGNITION-INDUCED CONTROL
  • DRIVE CHEMICAL EVOLUTION
  • CYCLIC PEPTIDE NANOTUBES
  • HYDROGEN-BONDING MOTIF
  • SUPRAMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY
  • THERMODYNAMIC CONTROL
  • CINCHONA ALKALOIDS

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