Pre-prints
Pre-prints of the Faraday Discussion papers are provided to participants of the meeting in order that questions to the authors and further comments may be prepared in advance of the meeting. Most of the time at the meeting will be devoted to a discussion that will be conducted on the assumption that the papers have already been read.
Authors should note that these pre-prints are not proofs. Proofs of each paper will be sent to the authors immediately after the meeting itself.
Please note that the quality of the pdf and pre-print is lower than that of the final published volume. The pre-prints are on A4 size paper; however the actual size of the final published volume will be the smaller book-style size.
To see the Scientific Programme with paper titles and timings please download the pdf programme available from the In this section links.
The following speakers will also present their work at FD143:
Introductory Lecture
R. A. L. Jones, University of Sheffield, UK
Concluding Remarks
G. Whitesides, Harvard University, USA
Downloadable Files
143/02. Chemo and phototactic nano/microbotsA. Sen, M. Ibele, Y. Hong and D. Velegol, Pennsylvania State University, USA
PDF
143/03. The efficiency of encapsulation within surface rehydrated polymersomesA. J. Parnell, N. Tzokova, P. D. Topham, C. M. Fernyhough, A. J. Ryan and R. A. L. Jones, University of Sheffield, UK
PDF
143/04. Molecular control of ionic conduction in polymer nanoporesE. R. Cruz-Chu, T. Ritz, Z. S. Siwy and K. Schulten, University of Illinois, USA
PDF
143/05. Nanomechanics of organic/inorganic interfaces: a theoretical insightM. L. Sushko, University College London, UK
PDF
143/06. Solid state nanofibrils based on self-assemblies: from cleaving from self-assemblies to multilevel hierarchical constructsO. Ikkala, R. H. A. Ras, N. Houbenov, J. Ruokolainen, M. Pääkkö, J. Laine, M. Leskelä, L. A. Berglund, T. Lindström, G. ten Brinke, H. Iatrou, N. Hadjichristidis and C. F. J. Faul, Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
PDF
143/07. Nanoparticles at electrified liquid-liquid interfaces: new options for electro-variable opticsM. E. Flatté, A. A. Kornyshev and M. Urbakh, Imperial College London, UK
PDF
143/08. Free-standing porous supramolecular assemblies of nanoparticles made using a double templating strategyX. Y. Ling, I. Y. Phang, D. N. Reinhoudt, G. J. Vansco and J. Huskens, University of Twente, The Netherlands
PDF
143/09. Polymer crystallization under nano-confinement of droplets studied by molecular simulationsW. Hu, T. Cai, Y. Ma, J. K. Hobbs, O. Farrance and G. Reiter, Nanjing University, China
PDF
143/10. Nanostructured wrinkled surfaces for templating bionanoparticlesA. Horn, H. G. Schoberth, S. Hiltl, A. Chiche, Q. Wang, A. Schweikart, A. Fery and A. Böker, University of Bayreuth, Germany
PDF
143/11. Silica nano-particle super hydrophobic surfaces: the effects of surface morphology and trapped air pockets on hydrodynamics drainage forcesD. Y. C. Chan, M. H. Uddin, K. L. Cho, I. I. Liaw, R. N. Lamb, G. W. Stevens, F. Grieser and R. R. Dagastine, University of Melbourne, Australia
PDF
143/12. Counterion-activated polyions as soft sensing systems in lipid bilayer membranes: from cell-penetrating peptides to DNAT. Takeuchi, N. Sakai and S. Matile, University of Geneva, Switzerland
PDF
143/13. Recognition of sequence-information in synthetic copolymer chains by a conformationally-constrained tweezer moleculeH. M. Colquhoun, Z. Zhu, C. J. Cardin, M. G. B. Drew and Y. Gan, University of Reading, UK
PDF
143/14. DNA self-assembly: from 2D to 3DC. Mao, Purdue University, USA
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143/15. Self-assembly of liquid crystal block copolymer PEG-b-smectic polymer in pure state and in dilute aqueous solutionB. Xu, R. Piñol, M. Nono-Djamen, S. Pensec, P. Keller, P.-A. Albouy, D. Lévy and M.-H. Li, Institut Curie, France
PDF
143/16. A novel self-healing supramolecular polymer systemS. Burattini, H. M. Colqhuhoun, B. W. Greenland and W. Hayes, University of Reading, UKR. Goldberg, L. Chai and N. Kampf, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
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143/17. Quantitative approaches to defining normal and aberrant protein homeostasisM. Vendruscolo and C. M. Dobson, University of Cambridge, UK
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143/18. Evolving nanomaterials using enzyme-driven dynamic peptide libraries (eDPL)A. K. Das, A. Hirst and R. V. Ulijn, University of Strathclyde, UK
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143/19. Rational design of peptide-based building blocks in nanoscience and synthetic biologyC. T. Armstrong, A. L. Boyle, E. H. C. Bromley, Z. N. Mahmoud, L. Smith, A. R. Thomson and D. N. Woolfson, University of Bristol, UK
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143/20. The influence of viscosity on the functioning of molecular motorsM. Klok, L. P. B. M. Janssen, W. R. Browne and B. L. Feringa, University of Gröningen, The Netherlands
PDF
143/21. Template sol-gel synthesis of mesostructured silica composites using metal complexes bearing amphiphilic side chains: immobilization of a polymeric Pd complex formed by a metallophilic interactionW. Otani, K. Kinbara and T. Aida, University of Tokyo, Japan
PDF
143/22. Self-assembled interpenetrating networks by orthogonal self assembly of surfactants and hydrogelatorsA. M. Brizard, M. C. A. Stuart and J. van Esch, Delft Chem Tech, The Netherlands
PDF
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