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Frank Caruso

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  676
Citations -  68648

Frank Caruso is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polyelectrolyte & Nanoparticle. The author has an hindex of 131, co-authored 641 publications receiving 61748 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank Caruso include Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation & University of Rome Tor Vergata.

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Gravimetric Monitoring of Nonionic Surfactant Adsorption from Nonaqueous Media onto Quartz Crystal Microbalance Electrodes and Colloidal Silica

TL;DR: The adsorption from benzene of a series of monodisperse poly(ethylene glycol) monododecyl ethers (C12En, n = 3, 5, and 8) and a polydisperse nonyl phenol ethoxylate with an average ethylene oxide c
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Modulating Targeting of Poly(ethylene glycol) Particles to Tumor Cells Using Bispecific Antibodies

TL;DR: Stealth PEG particles prepared by a mesoporous silica templating method are functionalized with bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) to obtain PEG–BsAb particles via a one‐step binding strategy for cell and tumor targeting, highlighting strategies to balance evading nonspecific clearance pathways, while improving tumor targeting and accumulation.
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Flow-Based Assembly of Layer-by-Layer Capsules through Tangential Flow Filtration.

TL;DR: This work develops a fully flow-based technique using tangential flow filtration (TFF) for LbL assembly on particles, and demonstrates the centrifugation-free assembly, including core dissolution, of drug-loaded capsules.
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Supramolecular Metal-Phenolic Gels for the Crystallization of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients.

TL;DR: The facile preparation of these supramolecular gels and the use of naturally abundant components in their synthesis provide a generic platform for studying gel-mediated crystallization of diverse APIs.
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Protein Adsorption and Coordination-Based End-Tethering of Functional Polymers on Metal–Phenolic Network Films

TL;DR: This study investigates the interaction of specific biomedically relevant proteins in solution using layer-by-layer-assembled tannic acid/FeIII MPN films and provides fundamental information on the interactions of MPNs with single proteins, mixtures of proteins as encountered in serum, and the noncovalent, coordination-based, functionalization ofMPN films.