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Guorong Sun

Researcher at Texas A&M University

Publications -  43
Citations -  2186

Guorong Sun is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Copolymer & Polymer. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 38 publications receiving 1998 citations. Previous affiliations of Guorong Sun include Washington University in St. Louis & University at Buffalo.

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Polymeric Nanostructures for Imaging and Therapy.

TL;DR: High efficiency in diagnosis and treatment of diseases and improving patient quality of life and compliance can be achieved through understanding the molecular events associated with various diseases, and combining the advances in the design of therapeutic and diagnostic agents and nanomaterials, together with the innovative instruments utilized for monitoring these agents.
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Gold nanocages covered with thermally-responsive polymers for controlled release by high-intensity focused ultrasound

TL;DR: The use of Au nanocages covered with smart, thermally-responsive polymers for controlled release with high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is described and localized release within the focal volume of HIFU is demonstrated.
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Copper-64-alloyed gold nanoparticles for cancer imaging: improved radiolabel stability and diagnostic accuracy.

TL;DR: The direct incorporation of (64) Cu into the lattice of the gold nanoparticle structure ensured the radiolabel stability for accurate localization in vivo and demonstrated the great potential of this unique alloyed nanostructure for preclinical and translational imaging.
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Nanoscopic cylindrical dual concentric and lengthwise block brush terpolymers as covalent preassembled high-resolution and high-sensitivity negative-tone photoresist materials.

TL;DR: A high-resolution, high-sensitivity negative-tone photoresist technique that relies on bottom-up preassembly of differential polymer components within cylindrical polymer brush architectures that are designed to align vertically on a substrate and allow for top-down single-molecule line-width imaging is described.