Emerging applications of stimuli-responsive polymer materials
Top Cited Papers
- 22 January 2010
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Materials
- Vol. 9 (2), 101-113
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2614
Abstract
Responsive polymer materials can adapt to surrounding environments, regulate transport of ions and molecules, change wettability and adhesion of different species on external stimuli, or convert chemical and biochemical signals into optical, electrical, thermal and mechanical signals, and vice versa. These materials are playing an increasingly important part in a diverse range of applications, such as drug delivery, diagnostics, tissue engineering and 'smart' optical systems, as well as biosensors, microelectromechanical systems, coatings and textiles. We review recent advances and challenges in the developments towards applications of stimuli-responsive polymeric materials that are self-assembled from nanostructured building blocks. We also provide a critical outline of emerging developments.Keywords
This publication has 134 references indexed in Scilit:
- Separation of Peptides with Polyionic Nanosponges for MALDI-MS AnalysisLangmuir, 2009
- A Virus‐Mimetic Nanogel VehicleAngewandte Chemie International Edition, 2008
- A Self-Consistent Field Analysis of the Neurofilament Brush with Amino-Acid ResolutionBiophysical Journal, 2007
- A Simulated Annealing Study of Diblock Copolymer Brushes in Selective SolventsMacromolecules, 2007
- Scaling Behavior of Nanopatterned Polymer BrushesSmall, 2006
- Botryoidal Assembly of Cholesteryl−Pullulan/Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) NanogelsLangmuir, 2006
- Controlled release of proteins from polymer-modified surfacesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Effect of Block Length on Solvent Response of Block Copolymer Brushes: Combinatorial Study with Block Copolymer Brush GradientsMacromolecules, 2006
- Reciprocating Power Generation in a Chemically Driven Synthetic MuscleNano Letters, 2005
- Phase diagram of a mixed polymer brushPhysical Review E, 2002