Self and directed assembly: people and molecules

Self-assembly and directed-assembly are two very important aspects of supramolecular chemistry. As a young postgraduate student working in Canada with Tom Fyles my introduction to Supramolecular Chemistry was through the self-assembly of phospholipid membranes to form vesicles for which we were deve...

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Main Author: Tony D. James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Beilstein-Institut 2016-03-01
Series:Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.12.42
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spelling doaj-5c5604cf5db8485baa4554834eb779e92021-02-02T03:25:48ZengBeilstein-InstitutBeilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry1860-53972016-03-0112139140510.3762/bjoc.12.421860-5397-12-42Self and directed assembly: people and moleculesTony D. James0Department of Chemistry, University of Bath, Bath, BA2 7AY UKSelf-assembly and directed-assembly are two very important aspects of supramolecular chemistry. As a young postgraduate student working in Canada with Tom Fyles my introduction to Supramolecular Chemistry was through the self-assembly of phospholipid membranes to form vesicles for which we were developing unimolecular and self-assembling transporter molecules. The next stage of my development as a scientist was in Japan with Seiji Shinkai where in a “Eureka” moment, the boronic acid templating unit (directed-assembly) of Wulff was combined with photoinduced electron transfer systems pioneered by De Silva. The result was a turn-on fluorescence sensor for saccharides; this simple result has continued to fuel my research to the present day. Throughout my career as well as assembling molecules, I have enjoyed bringing together researchers in order to develop collaborative networks. This is where molecules meet people resulting in assemblies worth more than the individual “molecule” or “researcher”. My role in developing networks with Japan was rewarded by the award of a Daiwa-Adrian Prize in 2013 and I was recently rewarded for developing networks with China with an Inaugural CASE Prize in 2015.https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.12.42boronic acidsfluorescenceglucose sensorself and directed assemblysupramolecular
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tony D. James
spellingShingle Tony D. James
Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry
boronic acids
fluorescence
glucose sensor
self and directed assembly
supramolecular
author_facet Tony D. James
author_sort Tony D. James
title Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
title_short Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
title_full Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
title_fullStr Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
title_full_unstemmed Self and directed assembly: people and molecules
title_sort self and directed assembly: people and molecules
publisher Beilstein-Institut
series Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry
issn 1860-5397
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Self-assembly and directed-assembly are two very important aspects of supramolecular chemistry. As a young postgraduate student working in Canada with Tom Fyles my introduction to Supramolecular Chemistry was through the self-assembly of phospholipid membranes to form vesicles for which we were developing unimolecular and self-assembling transporter molecules. The next stage of my development as a scientist was in Japan with Seiji Shinkai where in a “Eureka” moment, the boronic acid templating unit (directed-assembly) of Wulff was combined with photoinduced electron transfer systems pioneered by De Silva. The result was a turn-on fluorescence sensor for saccharides; this simple result has continued to fuel my research to the present day. Throughout my career as well as assembling molecules, I have enjoyed bringing together researchers in order to develop collaborative networks. This is where molecules meet people resulting in assemblies worth more than the individual “molecule” or “researcher”. My role in developing networks with Japan was rewarded by the award of a Daiwa-Adrian Prize in 2013 and I was recently rewarded for developing networks with China with an Inaugural CASE Prize in 2015.
topic boronic acids
fluorescence
glucose sensor
self and directed assembly
supramolecular
url https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.12.42
work_keys_str_mv AT tonydjames selfanddirectedassemblypeopleandmolecules
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