Issue 42, 2015

Vesicle–tube–ribbon evolution via spontaneous fusion in a self-correcting supramolecular tissue

Abstract

A real-time reversible fusion pathway from vesicles to fibres, passing through several types of intermediates such as fused vesicles and short and long tubes, was monitored in a cholesterol-based assembly. The mechanism of the structural evolution via a gelation process was studied by means of electronic microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering and powder X-ray diffraction. The fibres of the gel tissue could be switched by sonication and mechanical shaking to tubes and broken fibres, respectively, and reversed by thermal treatment or aging for a certain period via a fusion process. The destroyed fibres could match with each other in the healing process, showing the self-healing and self-correcting character of the self-assembly. This complete investigation of the reversible vesicle–tube–ribbon transition is of great significance in the design and synthesis of new nano/microstructures, especially stimulus-responsive aggregates through a “bottom-up” strategy.

Graphical abstract: Vesicle–tube–ribbon evolution via spontaneous fusion in a self-correcting supramolecular tissue

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Mar 2015
Accepted
15 May 2015
First published
18 May 2015

CrystEngComm, 2015,17, 8039-8046

Vesicle–tube–ribbon evolution via spontaneous fusion in a self-correcting supramolecular tissue

X. Yu, P. Zhang, Y. Li, L. Chen, T. Yi and Z. Ma, CrystEngComm, 2015, 17, 8039 DOI: 10.1039/C5CE00636H

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