Self-Assembly of Microcomponents
A special issue of Micromachines (ISSN 2072-666X). This special issue belongs to the section "D:Materials and Processing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 November 2019) | Viewed by 12453
Special Issue Editors
Interests: BioMEMS; self-assembly; micromachine; Lab on a Chip; membrane biophysics
Interests: bioMEMS; microfluidics; tissue engineering; hydrogel; microrobot; self-assembly
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues
The concept of self-assembly (SA) is cross-disciplinary, and is involved at a wide range of scales. In chemistry, biochemistry, and materials science, in which the building blocks are nanometer-scale molecules, the strategy of SA is inevitable. The SA of non-molecular meso-scale components (>100 nm) has also been challenged extensively. In the 2000s, researchers in MEMS and colloidal science explored this direction mainly based on the energy-minimizing principle, aiming (either practically or potentially) to form hard and static structures such as functional electronic circuits, optical systems, and photonic crystals. Recently, the application of SA has been expanded to soft, dynamic, and non-equilibrium systems, including programmable molecular systems, active matters, artificial cellular systems, stimuli-responsive polymers, and autonomous microrobots. In this Special Issue, we wish to invite you to contribute research papers, short communications, and review articles related to SA in mesoscale from a wide range of research fields.
Prof. Dr. Hiroaki Suzuki
Prof. Dr. Hiroaki Onoe
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- static self-assembly
- dynamic self-assembly
- non-equilibrium self-assembly
- self-assembly of soft materials
- programmable molecular systems
- active matters
- artificial cellular systems
- stimuli-responsive polymers
- autonomous microrobots
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