2018
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201807804
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Phenolic Building Blocks for the Assembly of Functional Materials

Abstract: Phenolic materials have long been known for their use in inks, wood coatings, and leather tanning. However, recently there has been a renewed interest in engineering advanced materials from phenolic building blocks. The intrinsic properties of phenolic compounds, such as metal chelation, hydrogen bonding, pH responsiveness, redox potentials, radical scavenging, polymerization, and light absorbance, have made them a distinct class of structural motifs for the synthesis of functional materials. Materials prepare… Show more

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Cited by 324 publications
(263 citation statements)
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References 252 publications
(165 reference statements)
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“…It is believed that the repeated oxidation of the built‐in catechol groups of dopamine and intermediates plays a vital role in the formation of PDA . The presence of abundant catechol functionalities in PDA imparts a strong coordination ability with multivalent metal ions (e.g., Fe 3+ , Zn 2+ , and Cu 2+ ) and reducing activity towards noble metal ions (e.g., Ag + ) during or after the formation of PDA . In particular, mussel‐inspired PDA exhibits indiscriminate affinity for almost any substrates regardless of its composition, surface chemistry, and geometry.…”
Section: Recent Progress In Functional Macromolecule‐enabled Colloidamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is believed that the repeated oxidation of the built‐in catechol groups of dopamine and intermediates plays a vital role in the formation of PDA . The presence of abundant catechol functionalities in PDA imparts a strong coordination ability with multivalent metal ions (e.g., Fe 3+ , Zn 2+ , and Cu 2+ ) and reducing activity towards noble metal ions (e.g., Ag + ) during or after the formation of PDA . In particular, mussel‐inspired PDA exhibits indiscriminate affinity for almost any substrates regardless of its composition, surface chemistry, and geometry.…”
Section: Recent Progress In Functional Macromolecule‐enabled Colloidamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Organic electrode materials with redox‐active functional groups such as phenol, carbonyl, quinones, carboxy or amines have been recently investigated to develop more clean and sustainable energy storage devices, substituting conventional electrode materials that mainly consisted of heavy transition metal oxides. These organic functional groups are found in green and naturally abundant biological systems and biomass . They play fundamental roles in numerous metabolic reactions like respiration, photosynthesis or adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (ATP) synthesis, among other biological processes that involve energy conversion and storage through a series of reversible reduction and oxidation reactions, via electron and proton transfer chains.…”
Section: Biomacromolecules For Electrochemical Energy Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, meals can drastically alter both the polysaccharide and lipid content in blood, whereas tumor cells often release trace amounts of nucleic acids into the bloodstream during growth and metastasis . A further issue limiting the comprehensive understanding of the biomolecule corona is the challenges associated with studying biomolecule adsorption on particulate nanomaterials due to the complexities of handling, separating, and purifying nanoparticles . Alternatively, macroscopic substrates are in many cases more amenable to studying bio–nano interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Metal–phenolic networks (MPNs) are an emerging class of near universally adherent organic–inorganic hybrid nanomaterials composed of phenolic ligands chelated with metal ions . Phenolic molecules can interact with nearly any material owing to their somewhat dendritic composition of multiple catechol/galloyl groups capable of interacting with surfaces through electrostatic interactions, hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic interactions, and π–π stacking.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%