J
Jeffrey S. Moore
Researcher at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Publications - 659
Citations - 56759
Jeffrey S. Moore is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polymerization & Polymer. The author has an hindex of 112, co-authored 633 publications receiving 50904 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey S. Moore include University of Texas at Austin & University of Michigan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Autonomic healing of polymer composites
Scott R. White,Nancy R. Sottos,Philippe H. Geubelle,Jeffrey S. Moore,Jeffrey S. Moore,Michael R. Kessler,Suresh R. Sriram,Suresh R. Sriram,Eric Brown,S. Viswanathan +9 more
TL;DR: A structural polymeric material with the ability to autonomically heal cracks is reported, which incorporates a microencapsulated healing agent that is released upon crack intrusion and polymerization of the healing agent is triggered by contact with an embedded catalyst, bonding the crack faces.
Journal ArticleDOI
Functional hydrogel structures for autonomous flow control inside microfluidic channels
David J. Beebe,Jeffrey S. Moore,Joseph M. Bauer,Qing Yu,Robin H. Liu,Chelladurai Devadoss,Byung Ho Jo +6 more
TL;DR: The fabrication of active hydrogel components inside microchannels via direct photopatterning of a liquid phase greatly simplifies system construction and assembly as the functional components are fabricated in situ, and the stimuli-responsive hydrogels components perform both sensing and actuation functions.
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A field guide to foldamers.
TL;DR: I. Foldamer Research 3910 A. Backbones Utilizing Bipyridine Segments 3944 1.
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Self-healing materials with microvascular networks
TL;DR: A self-healing system capable of autonomously repairing repeated damage events via a three-dimensional microvascular network embedded in the substrate is reported, opening new avenues for continuous delivery of healing agents for self-repair as well as other active species for additional functionality.
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Force-induced activation of covalent bonds in mechanoresponsive polymeric materials
Douglas A. Davis,Andrew Hamilton,Jinglei Yang,Jinglei Yang,Lee D. Cremar,Dara Van. Gough,Stephanie L. Potisek,Mitchell T. Ong,Paul V. Braun,Todd J. Martínez,Todd J. Martínez,Scott R. White,Jeffrey S. Moore,Nancy R. Sottos +13 more
TL;DR: It is found that pronounced changes in colour and fluorescence emerge with the accumulation of plastic deformation, indicating that in these polymeric materials the transduction of mechanical force into the ring-opening reaction is an activated process.