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      Nanoparticles in Liquid Crystals: Synthesis, Self-Assembly, Defect Formation and Potential Applications

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          Ordered mesoporous molecular sieves synthesized by a liquid-crystal template mechanism

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            Coupled synthesis and self-assembly of nanoparticles to give structures with controlled organization

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              Supramolecular dendritic liquid quasicrystals.

              A large number of synthetic and natural compounds self-organize into bulk phases exhibiting periodicities on the 10(-8)-10(-6) metre scale as a consequence of their molecular shape, degree of amphiphilic character and, often, the presence of additional non-covalent interactions. Such phases are found in lyotropic systems (for example, lipid-water, soap-water), in a range of block copolymers and in thermotropic (solvent-free) liquid crystals. The resulting periodicity can be one-dimensional (lamellar phases), two-dimensional (columnar phases) or three dimensional ('micellar' or 'bicontinuous' phases). All such two- and three-dimensional structures identified to date obey the rules of crystallography and their symmetry can be described, respectively, by one of the 17 plane groups or 230 space groups. The 'micellar' phases have crystallographic counterparts in transition-metal alloys, where just one metal atom is equivalent to a 10(3)-10(4)-atom micelle. However, some metal alloys are known to defy the rules of crystallography and form so-called quasicrystals, which have rotational symmetry other than the allowed two-, three-, four- or six-fold symmetry. Here we show that such quasiperiodic structures can also exist in the scaled-up micellar phases, representing a new mode of organization in soft matter.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Inorganic and Organometallic Polymers and Materials
                J Inorg Organomet Polym
                Springer Nature
                1574-1443
                1574-1451
                June 8 2007
                May 8 2007
                : 17
                : 3
                : 483-508
                Article
                10.1007/s10904-007-9140-5
                911a3a06-6a3e-4445-9bc8-c111e6c07225
                © 2007
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