Abstract In biomedicine, adhesives for hard and soft tissues are crucial for various clinical purposes. However, compared with that under dry conditions, adhesion performance in the presence of water or moisture is dramatically reduced. In this review, representative types of medical adhesives and the challenging aspects of wet adhesion are introduced. The adhesion mechanisms of marine mussels, sandcastle worms, and endoparasitic worms are described, and stemming from the insights gained, designs based on the chemistry of molecules like catechol and on coacervation and mechanical interlocking platforms are introduced in the viewpoint of translating these natural adhesion mechanisms into synthetic approaches
Bioadhesion is a versatile tool used by many organisms for a variety of purposes. It has roles to pl...
Nature provides many outstanding examples of adhesive strategies from which chemists and material sc...
This review is the first to draw together knowledge about bioadhesives secreted by a group of parasi...
This chapter describes strategies used in the biological world for adhesion to surfaces under a vari...
Nature has developed protein‐based adhesives whose underwater performance has attracted much researc...
Available online 19 November 2019.Protein-based bioadhesives are found in diverse marine invertebrat...
Mussels attach to solid surfaces in the sea. Their adhesion must be rapid, strong, and tough, or els...
The rapid and robust adhesion of marine mussels to diverse solid surfaces in wet environments is med...
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. Despite the recent progress in and demand for wet adhesives, pr...
Increasingly advanced aids for patching up people following an accident or surgery are being develop...
Marine biology is continually producing materials with properties unmatched by human technology. The...
Many marine organisms harness diverse protein molecules as underwater adhesives to achieve strong an...
Underwater adhesion is technically challenging mainly because of the presence of water which drastic...
An estimated 20 million tons of adhesives are used globally each year, and the amount is continually...
Physiochemical conditions in water are fundamentally different to those in air; hence, organisms req...
Bioadhesion is a versatile tool used by many organisms for a variety of purposes. It has roles to pl...
Nature provides many outstanding examples of adhesive strategies from which chemists and material sc...
This review is the first to draw together knowledge about bioadhesives secreted by a group of parasi...
This chapter describes strategies used in the biological world for adhesion to surfaces under a vari...
Nature has developed protein‐based adhesives whose underwater performance has attracted much researc...
Available online 19 November 2019.Protein-based bioadhesives are found in diverse marine invertebrat...
Mussels attach to solid surfaces in the sea. Their adhesion must be rapid, strong, and tough, or els...
The rapid and robust adhesion of marine mussels to diverse solid surfaces in wet environments is med...
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. Despite the recent progress in and demand for wet adhesives, pr...
Increasingly advanced aids for patching up people following an accident or surgery are being develop...
Marine biology is continually producing materials with properties unmatched by human technology. The...
Many marine organisms harness diverse protein molecules as underwater adhesives to achieve strong an...
Underwater adhesion is technically challenging mainly because of the presence of water which drastic...
An estimated 20 million tons of adhesives are used globally each year, and the amount is continually...
Physiochemical conditions in water are fundamentally different to those in air; hence, organisms req...
Bioadhesion is a versatile tool used by many organisms for a variety of purposes. It has roles to pl...
Nature provides many outstanding examples of adhesive strategies from which chemists and material sc...
This review is the first to draw together knowledge about bioadhesives secreted by a group of parasi...