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Aránzazu del Campo

Researcher at Leibniz Association

Publications -  155
Citations -  7743

Aránzazu del Campo is an academic researcher from Leibniz Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Self-healing hydrogels & Polymer. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 144 publications receiving 6190 citations. Previous affiliations of Aránzazu del Campo include University of Strasbourg & Max Planck Society.

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Advances in colloidal assembly: the design of structure and hierarchy in two and three dimensions.

TL;DR: This Review highlights the large number of methods to exploit colloidal assembly of comparably simple particles with nano- to micrometer dimensions in order to access complex structural hierarchies from nanoscopic over microscopic to macroscopic dimensions.
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Gecko-inspired surfaces: a path to strong and reversible dry adhesives.

TL;DR: This article reviews the fabrication approaches used so far for the creation of micro- and nanostructured fibrillar surfaces with adhesive properties and first responsive systems that allow thermal switching between nonadhesive and adhesive states are described.
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Light-triggered in vivo activation of adhesive peptides regulates cell adhesion, inflammation and vascularization of biomaterials.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that non-invasive, transdermal time-regulated activation of cell-adhesive RGD peptide on implanted biomaterials regulates in vivo cell adhesion, inflammation, fibrous encapsulation, and vascularization of the material.
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Multivalent H-bonds for self-healing hydrogels

TL;DR: UPy is used as a reversible and dynamic crosslinker to prepare hydrogels that are injectable and undergo rapid self-healing in response to damage.
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Functional Adhesive Surfaces with “Gecko” Effect: The Concept of Contact Splitting

TL;DR: In this article, the benefits derived from contact splitting into fibrils are separated into extrinsic/intrinsic contributions from fibril deformation, adaptability to rough surfaces, size effects due to surface-to-volume ratio, uniformity of stress distribution, and defect-controlled adhesion.