• Title of article

    BIOMIMETIC NANOSCALE REACTORS AND NETWORKS

  • Author/Authors

    Orwar، Owe نويسنده , , Karlsson، Anders نويسنده , , Karlsson، Mattias نويسنده , , Karlsson، Roger نويسنده , , Davidson، Max نويسنده , , Bergenholtz، Johan نويسنده , , Konkoli، Zoran نويسنده , , Jesorka، Aldo نويسنده , , Lobovkina، Tatsiana نويسنده , , Hurtig، Johan نويسنده , , Voinova، Marina نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    37
  • From page
    613
  • To page
    649
  • Abstract
    Methods based on self-assembly, self-organization, and forced shape transformations to form synthetic or semisynthetic enclosed lipid bilayer structures with several properties similar to biological nanocompartments are reviewed. The procedures offer unconventional micro- and nanofabrication routes to yield complex soft-matter devices for a variety of applications for example, in physical chemistry and nanotechnology. In particular, we describe novel micromanipulation methods for producing fluid-state lipid bilayer networks of nanotubes and surface-immobilized vesicles with controlled geometry, topology, membrane composition, and interior contents. Mass transport in nanotubes and materials exchange, for example, between conjugated containers, can be controlled by creating a surface tension gradient that gives rise to a moving boundary or by induced shape transformations. The network devices can operate with extremely small volume elements and low mass, to the limit of single molecules and particles at a length scale where a continuum mechanics approximation may break down. Thus, we also describe some concepts of anomalous fluctuationdominated kinetics and anomalous diffusive behaviours, including hindered transport, as they might become important in studying chemistry and transport phenomena in these confined systems. The networks are suitable for initiating and controlling chemical reactions in confined biomimetic compartments for rationalizing, for example, enzyme behaviors, as well as for applications in nanofluidics, bioanalytical devices, and to construct computational and complex sensor systems with operations building Aon chemical kinetics, coupled reactions and controlled mass transport.
  • Keywords
    biomimetic , Liposome , Nanotube , NETWORK , reaction , nanofluidics
  • Journal title
    Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
  • Record number

    121434