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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…

Nicholas L. Abbott

Verified

Cornell University · Family and Consumer Sciences

Active 1901–2024

h-index80
Citations24.3k
Papers54987 last 5y
Funding$32.6M1 active
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Research topics

  • Nanotechnology
  • Composite material
  • Materials science
  • Chemistry
  • Optoelectronics
  • Food science
  • Organic chemistry
  • Engineering
  • Optics
  • Biochemical engineering
  • Chemical engineering

Selected publications

  • Stimuli‐Responsive Liquid Crystal Printheads for Spatial and Temporal Control of Polymerization

    Advanced Materials · 2022 · 12 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Materials science
    • Nanotechnology
    • Chemical engineering

    Polymerization reactions triggered by stimuli play a pivotal role in materials science, with applications ranging from lithography to biomedicine to adaptive materials. However, the development of chemically triggered, stimuli-responsive systems that can confer spatial and temporal control on polymerization remains a challenge. Herein, chemical-stimuli-induced polymerization based on a liquid crystal (LC) printhead is presented. The LC responds to a local chemical stimulus at its aqueous interface, resulting in the ejection of initiator into the solution to trigger polymerization. Various LC printhead geometries are designed, allowing programming of: i) bulk solution polymerization, ii) synthesis of a thin surface-confined polymeric coating, iii) polymerization-induced self-assembly of block copolymers to form various nanostructures (sphere, worm-like, and vesicles), and iv) 3D polymeric structures printed according to local solution conditions. The approach is demonstrated using amphiphiles, multivalent ions, and biomolecules as stimuli.

  • Surfaces Decorated with Enantiomorphically Pure Polymer Nanohelices via Hierarchical Chirality Transfer across Multiple Length Scales

    Advanced Materials · 2021 · 25 citations

    • Materials science
    • Nanotechnology
    • Organic chemistry

    Mesoscale chiral materials are prepared by lithographic methods, assembly of chiral building blocks, and through syntheses in the presence of polarized light. Typically, these processes result in micrometer-sized structures, require complex top-down manipulation, or rely on tedious asymmetric separation. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) polymerization of chiral precursors into supported films of liquid crystals (LCs) are discovered to result in superhierarchical arrangements of enantiomorphically pure nanofibers. Depending on the molecular chirality of the 1-hydroxyethyl [2.2]paracyclophane precursor, extended arrays of enantiomorphic nanohelices are formed from achiral nematic templates. Arrays of chiral nanohelices extend over hundreds of micrometers and consistently display enantiomorphic micropatterns. The pitch of individual nanohelices depends on the enantiomeric excess and the purity of the chiral precursor, consistent with the theoretical model of a doubly twisted LC director configuration. During CVD of chiral precursors into cholesteric LC films, aspects of molecular and mesoscale asymmetry combine constructively to form regularly twisted nanohelices. Enantiomorphic surfaces permit the tailoring of a wide range of functional properties, such as the asymmetric induction of weak chiral systems.

  • BREWing better broader impacts

    MRS Bulletin · 2020

    • Biochemical engineering
    • Engineering
    • Chemistry

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Juan Pablo

    Argonne National Laboratory

    115 shared
  • Michael J. Schurr

    University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

    43 shared
  • Jonathan F. McAnulty

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    42 shared
  • Xiaoguang Wang

    Jiaxing University

    41 shared
  • Christopher J. Murphy

    41 shared
  • Manos Mavrikakis

    39 shared
  • Charles J. Czuprynski

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    37 shared
  • David M. Lynn

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    33 shared
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