One-pot self-assembly: Difference between revisions

From apm
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Related: added link to yet unwritten page Sequential flush by washout selfassembly
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 21: Line 21:
== Related ==
== Related ==


* The complementary method: [[Sequential flush by washout selfassembly]]
* The complementary method: [[Sequential flush-by washout self-assembly]]
* [[Self assembly]]
* [[Self assembly]]
* [[One-pot reaction]] – chemistry
* [[One-pot reaction]] – chemistry

Latest revision as of 08:44, 30 April 2026

This article is a stub. It needs to be expanded.

As the name implies all ingredients are mixed together simultaneously "in one pot".

  • faster process
  • less control
  • ... (wiki-TODO: expand here)

Artificial

A good part of artificial selfassembly is still done as one-pot reactions.
Notable exception are demonstrations og hierarchical assembly with structural DNA nanotechnology.

In nature

Nanobiology averts full-on one-pot self-assembly by compartmentalizations

  • disjunct surfaces (lipid walls)
  • disjunct volumes (verticles enclose by lipid walls)
  • means of transport inbetween

Related

The complement to one-pot self-assembly is iterative self-assembly