Catechols represent an important and versatile building block for the design of mussel-inspired synthetic adhesives and coatings. Indeed, their ability to establish large panoply of interactions with both organic and inorganic substrates has promoted catechol as a universal anchor for surface modifications. In addition to its pivotal role in adhesive interfaces, the catechol unit recently emerged as a powerful building block for the preparation of a large range of polymeric materials with intriguing structures and fascinating properties. The importance of catechols as efficient anchoring groups has been highlighted in recent excellent reviews partly dedicated to the characterization of their adhesive mechanisms onto surfaces and to their ap...
We fuse the surface anchoring abilities of catechols with the rapid ligating nature of thiocarbonyl ...
The adhesion of some marine organisms to almost any kind of surface in wet conditions has aroused in...
Marine mussels secret protein-based adhesives, which enable them to anchor to various surfaces in a ...
The catechol plays a variety of important roles in biological processes, prompting researchers to in...
The discovery of 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl-L-alanine (L-DOPA), a catechol-functionalized amino acid as maj...
Mussel foot proteins (Mfps) contain a large amount of the catecholic amino acid, DOPA, allowing the ...
The robust, versatile attachment of mussels in the intertidal zone has motivated a large effort to c...
Incorporating the binding chemistry of catechol functionality with RAFT chemistry offers a facile an...
The covalent functionalization of surfaces with molecules capable of providing new properties to the...
The combination of the surface-adhesive properties of catechol rings and functional moieties conveyi...
A facile one-step polymerization strategy is explored to achieve novel catechol-based materials. Dep...
Nature often serves as a model system for developing new adhesives. In aqueous environments, mussel-...
There is a great interest in incorporating catechol moieties into polymers in a controlled manner du...
Catechols play an important role in many natural systems. They are known to readily interact with bo...
We fuse the surface anchoring abilities of catechols with the rapid ligating nature of thiocarbonyl ...
We fuse the surface anchoring abilities of catechols with the rapid ligating nature of thiocarbonyl ...
The adhesion of some marine organisms to almost any kind of surface in wet conditions has aroused in...
Marine mussels secret protein-based adhesives, which enable them to anchor to various surfaces in a ...
The catechol plays a variety of important roles in biological processes, prompting researchers to in...
The discovery of 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl-L-alanine (L-DOPA), a catechol-functionalized amino acid as maj...
Mussel foot proteins (Mfps) contain a large amount of the catecholic amino acid, DOPA, allowing the ...
The robust, versatile attachment of mussels in the intertidal zone has motivated a large effort to c...
Incorporating the binding chemistry of catechol functionality with RAFT chemistry offers a facile an...
The covalent functionalization of surfaces with molecules capable of providing new properties to the...
The combination of the surface-adhesive properties of catechol rings and functional moieties conveyi...
A facile one-step polymerization strategy is explored to achieve novel catechol-based materials. Dep...
Nature often serves as a model system for developing new adhesives. In aqueous environments, mussel-...
There is a great interest in incorporating catechol moieties into polymers in a controlled manner du...
Catechols play an important role in many natural systems. They are known to readily interact with bo...
We fuse the surface anchoring abilities of catechols with the rapid ligating nature of thiocarbonyl ...
We fuse the surface anchoring abilities of catechols with the rapid ligating nature of thiocarbonyl ...
The adhesion of some marine organisms to almost any kind of surface in wet conditions has aroused in...
Marine mussels secret protein-based adhesives, which enable them to anchor to various surfaces in a ...