Issue 1 of Materials Horizons is now online!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

We are excited to announce that the inaugural issue of Materials Horizons has been published online! Showcasing some of the most exciting research across the breadth of the materials field, issue 1 includes articles such as:

Find the full issue here. We hope you enjoy reading it!

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Introducing Materials Horizons Editorial Board member Jun Chen

Jun Chen is the Chair Professor of energy materials chemistry at Nankai University, the Director of Key Laboratory of Advanced Energy Materials Chemistry (Ministry of Education), a Chief Scientist of the National Nano Key Science Research, and the Vice Chairman of the Chinese Society of Electrochemistry. He received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Nankai University in 1989 and 1992 respectively, and his Ph.D. from the University of Wollongong (Australia) in 1999. He held the NEDO fellowship at the National Institute of AIST Kansai Center (Japan) from 1999 to 2002. His research activity focuses on nanomaterials, electrochemistry, batteries, fuel cells and solar cells with efficient energy storage & conversion. He has published over 150 journal papers and has strong links with industry. He is the recipient of a number of awards including the Eward Wicke Award (International Metal Hydride Committee, 2002), the Outstanding Young Scientist Award (NSFC, 2003), the Cheung Kong Scholar Professor (MOE, 2005), the National Natural Science Award (2nd prize, 2011), and the Australia China Alumni Award for Research and Innovation (ACAA, 2012).

Professor Chen’s recent papers include:

Magnesium–air batteries: from principle to application
Tianran Zhang, Zhanliang Tao and Jun Chen  
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00059A

Arylamine organic dyes for dye-sensitized solar cells
Mao Liang and Jun Chen  
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2013, 42, 3453-3488 DOI: 10.1039/C3CS35372A

Efficient hydrogen storage with the combination of lightweight Mg/MgH2 and nanostructures
Fangyi Cheng, Zhanliang Tao, Jing Liang and Jun Chen  
Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 7334-7343 DOI: 10.1039/C2CC30740E

Metal–air batteries: from oxygen reduction electrochemistry to cathode catalysts
Fangyi Cheng and Jun Chen  
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012, 41, 2172-2192 DOI: 10.1039/C1CS15228A

Find profiles of all the Materials Horizons Editorial Board members in our recent Editorial.

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Materials Horizons author profile: Professor Shu-Hong Yu

Prof. Shu-Hong Yu is currently the Head of the Division of Nanomaterials & Chemistry at the Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Science at the Microscale, University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), and the Deputy Dean of the School of Chemistry & Materials, USTC. His research interests include bio-inspired synthesis and self-assembly of new nanostructured materials and nanocomposites, and their related properties. A very recent focus involves the scale-up synthesis of high quality ultrathin nanowires and their macroscopic-scale assembly. Find out more about Shu-Hong Yu’s research by visiting his research lab homepage.

Prof. Shu-Hong Yu has authored and co-authored more than 350 refereed journal publications, and 16 invited book chapters. His work has been cited 11,639 times, and has a h-index of 59. He has supervised 37 PhD students to completion at the USTC and currently supervises or co-supervises 25 PhD students.

Professor Shu-Hong Yu is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), and serves as an advisory/editorial board member of the journals Chemical Science, Materials Horizons, Nano Research, CrystEngComm, Part. Part. Syst. Charact. and Current Nanoscience. His recent awards include the Chem. Soc. Rev. Emerging Investigator Award (2010) and the Roy-Somiya Medal of the International Solvothermal and Hydrothermal Association (ISHA) (2010).

Why did you choose Materials Horizons to publish your exciting work?
I chose Materials Horizons for this Communication because this journal is a totally new flagship materials science journal launched by a very experienced publisher. I believe that our results published in this emerging journal will receive more exposure and broad attention in the community.

How did you find the Materials Horizons publication process?
The publishing and reviewing process was faster and highly efficient.

What topics would you like to see covered in future issues of Materials Horizons?
I think some coverage of advances in synthetic methodologies of functional nanomaterials, self-assembly and processing of nanoscale building blocks and their practical applications in diverse fields.

Shu-Hong Yu’s Communication article A shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks will appear in Issue 1 of Materials Horizons, and is free to access online!

A shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks
Huai-Ling Gao, Yang Lu, Li-Bo Mao, Duo An, Liang Xu, Jun-Tong Gu, Fei Long and Shu-Hong Yu
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00040K

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Introducing Materials Horizons Editorial Board member Yoshio Bando

Yoshio Bando received a Ph.D. degree at Osaka University in 1975 and joined the National Institute for Research in Inorganic Materials (now National Institute for Materials Science, NIMS) in the same year.  He is now a Fellow of NIMS and a Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA). From 1979 to 1981, he was a visiting scientist at the Arizona State University, USA.  He served as a Professor of Tsukuba University from 1992 to 2008.  Since 2008, he has been an Adjunct Professor at Waseda University.

Yoshio Bando has received a number of awards including the 3rd Thomson Reuters Research Front Award (2012), the 16th Tsukuba Prize (2005), Academic Awards from the Japanese Ceramic Society (1997) and the Seto Award from the Japanese Society for Electron Microscopy (1994).  He is now an adjunct member of the Science Council of Japan and also a Fellow of The American Ceramic Society.  He has been selected as an ISI Highly Cited Researcher in Materials Science.

Professor Bando’s current research concentrates on the synthesis and properties of novel inorganic 1D/2D nanomaterials and their in-situ TEM analysis. His recent papers include:

Controlled synthesis of patterned W18O49 nanowire vertical-arrays and improved field emission performance by in situ plasma treatment
Fei Liu, Tongyi Guo, Zhuo Xu, Haibo Gan, Lifang Li, Jun Chen, Shaozhi Deng, Ningsheng Xu, Dmitri Golberg and Yoshio Bando
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2013, 1, 3217-3225 DOI: 10.1039/C3TC30340C

Ultrathin nanoporous Fe3O4–carbon nanosheets with enhanced supercapacitor performance
Dequan Liu, Xi Wang, Xuebin Wang, Wei Tian, Jiangwei Liu, Chunyi Zhi, Deyan He, Yoshio Bando and Dmitri Golberg
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2013, 1, 1952-1955 DOI: 10.1039/C2TA01035F

Cobalt(II,III) oxide hollow structures: fabrication, properties and applications
Xi Wang, Wei Tian, Tianyou Zhai, Chunyi Zhi, Yoshio Bando and Dmitri Golberg
J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 23310-23326 DOI: 10.1039/C2JM33940D, Feature Article

Find profiles of all the Materials Horizons Editorial Board members in our recent Editorial.

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Materials Horizons author profile: Professor Gordon Wallace

You may have seen Gordon Wallace’s recent Materials Horizons communication on liquid crystalline dispersions of graphene oxide. (If not, take a look here; it’s free to access!) Here, we profile the author, and ask him about his experience with Materials Horizons.

Professor Gordon Wallace is currently the Executive Research Director at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science and Director of the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute. He previously held an ARC Federation Fellowship and currently holds an ARC Laureate Fellowship. Professor Wallace’s research interests include organic conductors, nanomaterials and electrochemical probe methods of analysis, and the use of these in the development of Intelligent Polymer Systems. A current focus involves the use of these tools and materials in developing bio-communications from the molecular to skeletal domains in order to improve human performance via medical Bionics.

With more than 700 refereed publications, Professor Wallace has attracted some 17,000 citations and has a h-index of 61. He has supervised 77 PhD students to completion at the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute and currently co-supervisors 30 PhD students.

Professor Wallace is an elected Fellow at the Australian Academy of Science, the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering, the Institute of Physics (UK) and the Royal Australian Chemical Institute. In addition to being named NSW Scientist of the Year in the chemistry category in 2008, Professor Wallace was also appointed to the Korean World Class University System, and received the Royal Australian Chemical Institute HG Smith Prize.

Why did you choose Materials Horizons to publish your exciting work?
I like the approach that combines education and digestible insights with the forefront of research. More and more I realise the critical need to communicate advances in knowledge emanating from the research laboratory to a broad cross section of our communities as effectively and efficiently as possible.

How did you find the Materials Horizons publication process?
The process was effective and efficient.

What topics would you like to see covered in future issues of Materials Horizons?
I think some coverage of advances in BioAFM would be most timely.

 

Formation and processability of liquid crystalline dispersions of graphene oxide
Rouhollah Jalili, Seyed Hamed Aboutalebi, Dorna Esrafilzadeh, Konstantin Konstantinov, Joselito M. Razal, Simon E. Moulton and Gordon G. Wallace
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00050H

Manipulation of graphene oxide sheets to form liquid crystalline dispersions enabling fabrication of multifunctional 3D-structures.

 

 

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Materials Horizons – new advanced articles have been published!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

Self-Assembly of Aligned Rutile@Anatase TiO2 Nanorod@CdS Quantum Dots Ternary Core-Shell Heterostructure: Cascade Electron-Transfer by Interfacial Design
Fang-Xing Xiao, Jianwei Miao and Bin Liu

A novel self-assembly approach based on electrostatic interaction has been developed for the synthesis of rutile@anatase TiO2 nanorod (NR)@CdS quantum dots (QDs) ternary core-shell heterostructure, for which in-situ formed monodispersed anatase TiO2 layer was intimately sandwiched between rutile TiO2 NRs and CdS QDs. It has been demonstrated that the well-defined bilayer interface significantly improves the photocatalytic performance of the ternary heterostructure (i.e. rutile@anatase TiO2 NR@CdS QDs), owing predominantly to the appropriate band alignment of constituting semiconductors, thus facilitating photogenerated electron-hole separation and charge collection under simulated solar light irradiation.

 
Mater. Horiz., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00097d, Accepted Manuscript


Supramolecular host–guest polymeric materials for biomedical applications
Xian Jun Loh

The bottom–up synthesis of highly complex functional materials from simple modular blocks is an intriguing area of research. Driven by the chemistry of supramolecular assembly, modules which self-assemble into intricate structures have been described. These hierarchically assembled systems extend beyond the individual molecule and rely on non-covalent interactions in a directed self-assembly process. The intrinsic properties of the materials can be modified by exploiting the dynamic and specific uni-directional interactions among the building. This also allows the building of novel supramolecular structures such as hydrogels, micelles and vesicles. These aqueous supramolecular networks belong to a novel category of soft biomaterials exhibiting attractive properties such as stimuli-responsiveness and self-healing properties derived from their dynamic behavior. These are important for a wide variety of emerging applications. In this review, the latest literature describing the formation of dynamic polymeric networks through host–guest complex formation will be summarised. These approaches carried out in the aqueous medium have unlocked a versatile toolbox for the design and fine-tuning of supramolecular self-assembled materials.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00057e, Advanced Article

Protein coronas suppress the hemolytic activity of hydrophilic and hydrophobic nanoparticles
Krishendu Saha, Daniel Moyano and Vincent M Rotello

The role of nanoparticle surface hydrophobicity on its hemolytic property is established in the absence and the presence of plasma proteins. Significantly, the formation of plasma protein corona on NP surface protects red blood cells from both hydrophilic and hydrophobic NP-mediated hemolysis.

Mater. Horiz., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00075c, Accepted Manuscript

 

Dendrimer-linked, renewable and magnetic carbon nanotube aerogels
Xuetong Zhang, Liang Chen, Tianyu Yuan, Huan Huang, Zhuyin Sui, Ran Du, Xin Li, Yun Lua and Qingwen Lib

Magnetic carbon nanotube aerogels with a repeated aerogel–sol–hydrogel–aerogel transition have been acquired by the special drying of gel-precursors made via assembling individual nanotubes with dendritic poly(amido amine) molecules in the presence of Fe3O4 nanoparticles, which has inspired us to synthesize renewable 3D porosints composed of organic, inorganic and their hybrid building blocks.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00076a, Advanced Article

 

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Materials Horizons – new advanced articles have been published!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

Taking Orders from light: progress in photochromic bio-materials
Junji Zhang, Jiaxing Wang and He Tian

Photochromic materials are a family of compounds which undergo photo-reversible transformations between two different isomers with distinct physical and chemical properties. Most smart photochromic materials have been exploited in research areas such as electro-optical functional materials, while recently their applications have extended to novel bio-materials. Biological systems, such as tissue/cellular imaging, nucleotides, peptides, ion channels, etc., have emerged as a revolutionary research frontier for photochromic materials since both covalent coupling and non-covalent interactions with bio-molecules have been achieved. This review commences with a brief description of exciting progress in this field, and describes strategies for using photochromic functional molecules from bio-sensing and cell imaging to optical manipulation of bio-macromolecules (nucleotides, peptides, ion channels, GFP, etc.). Further development of these photo-switches as well as remaining challenges are also discussed and put in prospect.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00031a, Advance Article

Reactive self-assembled monolayers: from surface functionalization to gradient formation
Carlo Nicosia and Jurriaan Huskens

This review describes the progress of the development of surface chemical reactions for the modification of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) and the fabrication of surface chemical gradients. Various chemical reactions can be carried out on SAMs to introduce new functionalities. “Click” reactions, which are highly efficient and selective, have largely contributed to the development and implementation of surface chemical reactions in the fields of biotechnology, drug discovery, materials science, polymer synthesis, and surface science. Besides full homogeneous functionalization, SAMs can be modified to exhibit a gradual variation of physicochemical properties in space. Surface-confined chemical reactions can be used for the fabrication of surface chemical gradients making the preparation of exceptionally versatile interfaces accessible.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00046j, Advance Article

Catalyst-free room temperature self-healing elastomers based on aromatic disulfide metathesis
Alaitz Rekondo, Roberto Martin, Alaitz Ruiz de Luzuriaga, Germán Cabañero, Hans J. Grande and Ibon Odriozola

Aromatic disulfide metathesis has been reported as one of the very few dynamic covalent chemistries undergone at room-temperature. Here, bis(4-aminophenyl) disulfide is effectively used as a dynamic crosslinker for the design of self-healing poly(urea–urethane) elastomers, which show quantitative healing efficiency at room-temperature, without the need for any catalyst or external intervention.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00061c, Advance Article







Novel features of multiferroic and magnetoelectric ferrites and chromites exhibiting magnetically driven ferroelectricity

Rana Saha, A. Sundaresan and C. N. R. Rao

A few oxides such as YMnO3, TbMnO3, YMn2O5 and BiFeO3 constituted the small family of well-characterized multiferroics until recently, but this area of research has been enlarged significantly due to the advent of a novel class of oxides exhibiting interesting multiferroic and magnetoelectric properties arising from magnetically induced ferroelectricity. Interestingly, these materials are simple transition metal oxides, most of them possessing the perovskite structure. In this review article, we present the significant features of multiferroic and magnetoelectric ferrites and chromites which owe their ferroelectricity to magnetic interactions. Some of the important systems discussed are BiFeO3 whose properties are affected by magnetic and electric fields, rare-earth orthoferrites LnFeO3 (Ln = Dy, Gd and Sm) and rare-earth orthochromites LnCrO3, where exchange-striction plays a significant role. Perovskite oxides of the type Y(A1−xBx)O3 (A, B = Fe, Cr, Mn) exhibit multiferroic properties, although the existence of these properties in YFeO3 and YCrO3 is in doubt. Such oxides with a non-magnetic rare-earth cation at the A site and two transition metal ions in the B-site permit tuning the transition temperatures by varying the B site ions and their relative proportions or the Ln ion. Multiferroic properties of simple ferrites such as Al(Ga)FeO3 where cation disorder appears to play a role are also discussed. Problems and challenges in this area of research are indicated.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00073g, Advance Article

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

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Self healing “Terminator” polymers- Materials Horizons article featured on Fox News and the Daily Mail newspaper

A paper from Materials Horizons has been featured in Chemistry World.  This feature has in turn been picked up by both United Press International,the Daily Mail newspaper and Fox News.  In this paper, bis(4-aminophenyl) disulfide is used as a dynamic cross-linker for the design of self-healing poly(urea-urethane) elastomers which can heal at room temperature by placing the sections together without any catalyst or other external intervension.  

Catalyst-free room-temperature self-healing elastomers based on aromatic disulfide metathesis
Alaitz Rekondo, Roberto Martin, Alaitz Ruiz de Luzuriaga, German Cabanero, Hans J. Grande and Ibon Odriozola

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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BBC World Service Recording at ISACS12

Want to know what Daniel Nocera thinks about wirelessly beaming energy from space? Over the coming weekend, the BBC World Service will be broadcasting an episode of The Forum, which was recorded at the RSC’s ISACS12 conference last week entitled “Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy”.

 

Quentin Cooper hosts the programme in which Daniel Nocera of Harvard University, Clare Grey of the University of Cambridge, Carlos Henrique de Brito Cruz of the State University of Campinas and Jim Watson of the UK Energy Research Council discuss the work in their areas of expertise and future challenges for renewable energy as a whole.

 

The programme will be broadcast at 23.06 GMT on Saturday 14th September, 10.06 GMT on Sunday 15th September and 2.06 GMT on Monday 16th September. Find out when this is in your local time at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmeguide/.

– Written by Yuandi Li, RSC Science Executive

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Materials Horizons – new advanced articles have been published!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

Molecular Crystalline Materials with Tunable Luminescent Properties: From Polymorphs To Multi-component Solids
Dongpeng Yan and David G. Evans

Tuning and controlling the luminescent properties of molecular materials by changing the orientation and arrangement of the fluorophores within a solid has played an important role in realizing multi-color emission. The formation of polymorphs and multi-component molecular solids have attracted considerable interest as new ways of achieving controllable luminescence and other photophysical properties for application in the next generation of photofunctional materials. In this article, recent advances in the synthesis of fluorescent polymorphs and multi-component materials and potential photo-related applications of the resulting materials are described. We first review the methods of preparation of polymorphs with tunable static luminescence, and the switching of the dynamic luminescence between polymorphs for potential sensor applications is also introduced. Attention is then focused on the supramolecular design (making use of hydrogen bonding and halogen bonding interactions) and methods of fabrication of multi-component molecular solids, and their color-tunable fluorescence and phosphorescence together with their stimuli-responsive properties for use as sensors. The use of density functional theory to study intramolecular and intermolecular energy transfer as well as the electronic structures of multi-component molecular solids is also outlined. Finally, we briefly discuss perspectives for the further development of these luminescent molecular solid-state materials.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00023k, Advance Article

A Shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks
Huai-Ling Gao, Yang Lu, Li-Bo Mao, Duo An, Liang Xu, Jun-Tong Gu, Fei Long and Shu-Hong Yu

A shape-memory chitosan scaffold (CSS) fabricated by an ice-templated method can be used as a versatile host matrix for self-assembly of a wide range of functional nanoscale building blocks, and thus it can produce a family of functional three-dimensional (3D) macroscale assemblies, which show promising practical application potential in various fields.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00040k, Advance Article

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Large-area arrays of three-dimensional plasmonic subwavelength-sized structures from azopolymer surface-relief gratings

Robert J. Moerland, Jenni E. Koskela, Aleksandr Kravchenko, Mikael Simberg, Stefan van der Vegte, Matti Kaivola, Arri Priimagi and Robin H. A. Ras

The field of plasmonics allows for confinement and control of light on the nanoscale. Due to potentially strong resonant interactions that light can have with metal nanoscale structures, metals are a good candidate to tailor interactions with light, e.g., periodic arrays of subwavelength metal structures can support extremely narrow resonances and show enhanced transmission. The field of plasmonics has evolved from using simple geometries to the desire to create complex nanostructures for improved control. The availability of fabrication techniques that provide for complex structures, however, is paired with the seemingly inevitable increase in complexity of fabrication techniques themselves. We present a facile and scalable method for the fabrication of periodic arrays of unique three-dimensional subwavelength-sized structures such as tapered holes and pyramidically shaped subwavelength-sized particles. The procedure consists of holographic inscription of a two-dimensional surface-relief grating in an azobenzene-containing polymer film, evaporative gold deposition and broad-beam ion milling of the relief structure. The method allows the fabrication of highly uniform arrays with tunable lattice parameters and dimensions over large sample areas. The optical response of the fabricated structures is determined experimentally and through simulation, which confirm the unique plasmonic response of the structures. While the proposed fabrication method has clear benefits for plasmonics, it could easily be applied also in other fields, for example by using other coating materials.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00008g, Advance Article

Magnesium-air battery: from principle to application

Tianran Zhang, Zhanliang Tao and Jun Chen

Metal–air batteries are important power sources for electronics and vehicles because of their remarkable high theoretical energy density and low cost. In this paper, we introduce the fundamental principles and applications of Mg–air batteries. Recent progress in Mg or Mg alloys as anode materials and typical classes of air cathode catalysts for Mg–air batteries are reviewed. In the meantime, different compositions of the electrolyte are also compared. The design of electrode materials both for anodes and cathodes of Mg–air batteries is discussed for further performance improvement. It is noted that in the development of rechargeable Mg–air batteries, bi-functional catalysts with reversible oxygen reduction and evolution reactions are facing challenges and it is worthwhile devoting much effort to this.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00059a, Advance Article
 
  
 

Formation and Processability of Liquid Crystalline Dispersions of Graphene Oxide

Rouhollah Jalili, Seyed Hamed Aboutalebi, Dorna Esrafilzadeh, Konstantin Konstantinov, Joselito M. Razal, Simon E. Moulton and Gordon G. Wallace

Rational control over the formation and processability, and consequently final properties of graphene oxide liquid crystalline dispersions has been a long-standing goal in the development of bottom-up device fabrication processes. Here we report, the principal conditions through which such levels of control can be exercised to fine-tune dispersion properties for further processing.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00050h, Advance Article

 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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