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1 design approach can be applied to synthetic adhesives.
2 nd implications for large-scale bio-inspired adhesives.
3 cure is a popular mode of curing for dental adhesives.
4 of geckos has inspired hundreds of synthetic adhesives.
5 n specimens prepared from the commercialized adhesives.
6 ion stage usually mediated by polysaccharide adhesives.
7 ve in a way not easily achieved by synthetic adhesives.
8 rformance and explaining differences between adhesives.
9 s in printable materials, cargo carriers and adhesives.
10 in bonds and compared it with 2 other dental adhesives.
11 FG are mechanically the weakest adhesives.
12 ol (PEG) adhesives, and 3 albumin-based (AB) adhesives.
13 e contact for chronic use without sutures or adhesives.
14 ical, or mechanical insulators, bearings, or adhesives.
15 r developing effective artificial underwater adhesives.
16 thin the primers of 3 commercially available adhesives.
17 -dentin interfaces created by etch-and-rinse adhesives.
18 th poor mechanical durability in these model adhesives.
19 microdevices and keratoprostheses, or tissue adhesives.
20 s the strongest ever measured for biological adhesives.
21 e was no difference in bond strength between adhesives.
22 lead-free alloys and electrically conductive adhesives.
23 s such as the specificities of intercellular adhesives.
24 esin-dentin interfaces of one-step self-etch adhesives.
25 e is also a long-standing problem in polymer adhesives.
26 to distinguish among high-performing dentin adhesives.
27 discriminating among high-performing dentin adhesives.
28 ies of synthetic catechol-based polymers and adhesives.
29 mber of products ranging from emulsifiers to adhesives.
30 re currently being prepared and evaluated as adhesives.
31 oic acid was used to formulate the versatile adhesives.
32 t T110-2007 and was comparable to commercial adhesives.
33 CP, increased the strength of the biopolymer adhesives.
34 heep, horse) was occasionally found in mixed adhesives.
35 ed SOR, SOL and CYTO properties of unaltered adhesives.
36 esives and biomimetic chemically synthetized adhesives.
37 cretion resemble those of pressure-sensitive adhesives.
38 s and have inspired novel types of synthetic adhesives.
39 lopment of a new class of stimuli-responsive adhesives.
40 able block polyesters are pressure-sensitive adhesives.
41 of proteins and sugars gives rise to strong adhesives.
42 exocytosis in the secretion of the permanent adhesives.
43 surfaces as compared with those of existing adhesives.
44 eneral principles underlying diverse botanic adhesives.
45 yzae(1), powerful glycoprotein-rich mucilage adhesives(2) cement melanized and pressurized dome-shape
48 manufacture self-cleaning, re-attachable dry adhesives, although problems related to their durability
49 cluding genetically engineered protein-based adhesives and biomimetic chemically synthetized adhesive
50 se proteins have been created to function as adhesives and coatings for a wide range of applications.
55 , dental composites and light curing, dental adhesives and dental cements, ceramics, and new function
58 e two representative examples, protein-based adhesives and fibers have attracted tremendous attention
59 plorations and applications of protein-based adhesives and fibers in wound healing, tissue regenerati
62 This study investigated the influence of adhesives and marginal sealing on demineralization progr
64 throughput chemical screens to identify anti-adhesives and our findings provide insight into the targ
65 e grafts (CTG) between cyanoacrylates tissue adhesives and polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) sutures.
66 were bonded with etch-and-rinse or self-etch adhesives and prepared for microtensile bond testing and
67 ious implications for the fabrication of dry adhesives and robotic systems inspired by the gecko's lo
68 ssue scaffolds, therapeutic delivery, tissue adhesives and sealants, as well as the formation of inte
69 ing at the margins of restorations depend on adhesives and significantly contribute to the progress o
70 ed the antimicrobial activity of synthesized adhesives and the DOX-containing eluates against Strepto
71 nship between nanophase separation in dentin adhesives and their long-term mechanical properties, we
76 eins share no homology with any other marine adhesives, and a common sequence-basis that defines how
77 approved by FDA as surgery sealants, tissue adhesives, and are now being investigated as a vitreous
80 for designing physical barriers, biomimetic adhesives, and targeted delivery systems that go beyond
87 ngths approaching those of permanent bonding adhesives are possible as feature size is scaled down.
88 these marine organisms, two main biological adhesives are presented, including genetically engineere
95 ducts of future materials, including polymer adhesives, are within the context of a healthy ecosystem
96 utility of compounds with such structures as adhesives arises in part because their isocyanate functi
97 igh loads of goethite ochre to make compound adhesives at the type-site of the Mousterian, Le Moustie
101 oth biologically and for design of synthetic adhesives, but the findings may be relevant to the chara
102 adding to clinical steps in the placement of adhesives, but their incorporation within dental adhesiv
103 e successful encapsulation of DOX within the adhesives-but, more important, to support the hypothesis
104 0 cm water pressure with experimental BisGMA adhesives by ethanol wet-bonding exhibited tensile stren
105 sue adhesives were included: 4 cyanoacrylate adhesives (CA), 2 fibrin glues (FG), 3 polyethylene glyc
107 We tested the hypothesis that resin-based adhesives can be used for such fabrication without compr
109 proteins underlie the elasticity of natural adhesives, cell adhesion proteins, and muscle proteins.
110 -dentin interfaces created by commercialized adhesives challenges its clinical effectiveness as a mec
115 descended to ~50% in enamel, whereas TPO+4E adhesives consistently scored ~80% DC across the enamel-
117 vestigate the antibacterial effect of dental adhesives containing dimethylaminododecyl methacrylate (
119 SOL) and cytotoxicity (CYTO) of experimental adhesives containing nitrogen-doped titanium dioxide nan
124 rinted thermoplastic electrically conductive adhesives (ECA), which takes the advantage of the capill
127 le bond strength was enhanced for 2 types of adhesives following the addition of both inhibitors.
129 This work should guide the design of new adhesives for binding to charged surfaces in saline envi
130 comonomer in the formulation of hydrophobic adhesives for ethanol wet-bonding is a concern, due to i
132 velopment of medicine-containing patches and adhesives for intraoral use have led to a new approach f
133 on depolymerization and high performances as adhesives for lignocellulosic bioplastics were achieved.
138 ve mechanisms and in the design of synthetic adhesives for soft substrates (including for biomedical
139 s obtained by top-down microfabrication (dry adhesives, friction driven), and represent a unique flui
140 set of well-dated and chemically identified adhesives from Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age conte
141 Homo sapiens is known to have made compound adhesives from naturally sticky substances and ochre, a
159 and to compare the interfacial integrity of adhesives in cavities through 3-dimensional (3D) image a
160 yond gaining control on the use of ultrathin adhesives in cutting-edge technologies such as stretchab
161 EMA-based commercial and experimental dental adhesives in terms of shear bond strength and microtensi
162 es has very often been missing in biomimetic adhesives; in turn, their performance is significantly l
163 vival studies of resin composites and dental adhesives indicate, secondary caries is the foremost rea
164 ive and non-drug release antibacterial resin adhesives ingeniously overcome the defect of the present
165 n of the biobased materials makes salamander adhesives interesting for practical applications in the
167 rom experiments and other Middle Paleolithic adhesives, it demonstrates that Neandertals mastered com
168 responsible for the performance of fibrillar adhesives, it will be important to take advantage of the
169 s implications for the strength of polymeric adhesives; it also suggests a method for patterning thin
173 substantially outperform previous biomimetic adhesives obtained by top-down microfabrication (dry adh
174 eport strong and multi-functional underwater adhesives obtained from fusing mussel foot proteins (Mfp
180 ration (OR, 1.40; 95% CI, 1.06-1.84), use of adhesives on patients (OR, 1.65; 95% CI, 1.22-2.24), and
184 livery to tissues and cultures, and serve as adhesives or barriers between tissue and material surfac
185 c constituents of the filter matrix, such as adhesives or binders was likely the main formaldehyde so
186 properties compare favorably with commercial adhesives or bio-based polyester formulations but withou
187 pment of bio-inspired devices such as tissue adhesives or needles, trocars, and vascular tunnelers wh
188 covalent bonding, as in reactive structural adhesives, or through noncovalent interactions, which ar
189 SP), Adper Scotchbond (ASB) and experimental adhesives (OSP + 25% or 30% of N_TiO(2)) were fabricated
191 es both natural and synthetic gecko-inspired adhesives, over 14 orders of magnitude in adhesive force
192 mm x 4 mm), among the strongest pure CNT dry adhesives, over a temperature range from -196 to 1,000 d
193 orobenzene for insecticides, D4-siloxane for adhesives, para-chlorobenzotrifluoride (PCBTF) for solve
194 Several different appendages, adhesins and adhesives play roles during attachment, and foster the t
195 te the recent progress in and demand for wet adhesives, practical underwater adhesion remains limited
199 techol synergy, polymeric pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSAs) have now been synthesized by copolymeri
208 l benefits; however, the development of anti-adhesives requires an in-depth knowledge of adhesion-ass
209 ment and use of polymeric hydrogels as wound adhesives, sealants, and hemostats, their design require
210 ent design elements of both gecko and mussel adhesives, should be useful for reversible attachment to
212 or to the development of novel self-cleaning adhesives, smart surfaces, microelectromechanical system
215 rogress was slower in the fluoride-releasing adhesives SP and BF and significantly different from SB,
216 their numerous current applications, tissue adhesives still face several limitations and unresolved
218 y, the introduction of cyanoacrylate tissues adhesives such as Histoacryl Blue (Trihawk International
219 ing(5,6), existing liquid or hydrogel tissue adhesives suffer from several limitations: weak bonding,
220 life cycle assessment demonstrates that the adhesives synthesized via this approach outcompete the s
222 we report tertiary amine (TA)-modified resin adhesives (TA@RAs) with pH-responsive antibacterial effe
223 platform in the future for discovery of anti-adhesives targeted for strain and species specificity.
224 merous applications in reinforcing polymers, adhesives, textiles, medical devices, metallic alloys, a
226 s study is to make strong and durable dental adhesives that are free from 2 symbolic methacrylate-bas
227 medical need for tough biodegradable polymer adhesives that can adapt to or recover from various mech
229 ported in resin-dentin interfaces created by adhesives that contain 10-methacryloyloxydecyl dihydroge
230 ew model system for the design of smart soft adhesives that dynamically respond to their environment
232 Developing versatile, tough, and sustainable adhesives that function effectively in both wet and dry
233 Marine mussels secrete strong underwater adhesives that have been mimicked in synthetic systems.
234 inhibitors into the synthesis of therapeutic adhesives that may enhance the longevity of hybrid layer
236 itive behaviour of carbon nanotube (CNT) dry adhesives that show a temperature-enhanced adhesion stre
237 top, we have created gecko-foot-mimetic dry adhesives that show macroscopic adhesive forces of appro
239 observations suggest that polymerization of adhesives that underwent insufficient light cure is salv
240 if such self-cure phenomenon takes place in adhesives that underwent prior inadequate light cure and
241 als for a range of applications, such as dry adhesives, tissue engineering, biointegrated electronics
242 al groups have become commonplace in medical adhesives, tissue scaffolds, and advanced smart polymers
243 cycle, many marine organisms rely on natural adhesives to attach to wet surfaces for movement and sel
246 by integration of film-terminated fibrillar adhesives to hybrid nematic liquid crystal network (LCN)
247 for many biomedical applications, designing adhesives to perform in the presence of body fluids prov
248 te rapid deterioration of the ability of the adhesives to stick to dentine, clinical studies show tha
249 the morphology of 81 species with fibrillar adhesives to test the hypothesis that packing density of
250 -coloured plastic dental fillings secured by adhesives to tooth structures are widely used to fix dec
255 ood contact chemicals from printing inks and adhesives used on plastic food contact materials was dev
256 literature on the use of a variety of tissue adhesives used to seal corneal incisions in cataract sur
257 formulated, prepared, and evaluated 2 dental adhesives using mixtures of a hydrolytically stable ethe
258 ly, the mechanical properties of these model adhesives varied from 'minimal change' to 'significant d
259 egree of conversion (DC) of HAp-incorporated adhesives was monitored by infrared spectroscopy during
261 lp facilitate the next generation of aqueous adhesives, we performed a combination of surface forces
266 6.0 mm, t = 0.5 mm) of OPTB and experimental adhesives were characterized using Time-of-Flight Second
276 easurements suggested that the hybrid dental adhesives were relatively more hydrophobic than the Bis-
280 leaking pressures were determined for these adhesives when used to seal 4.1-mm central lacerations a
281 s provides an analogy to mussel and barnacle adhesives whereas the high inorganic content is exclusiv
283 ectrodes with conductive gels and aggressive adhesives, while requiring precise positioning to ensure
286 s)-into synthetic, cost-effective underwater adhesives with adjustable nano- and macroscale character
287 non-covalent interactions for the design of adhesives with advanced functionalities such as stimuli
288 on polymerization effectiveness of self-etch adhesives with different pHs has rarely been studied.
290 luorometric assay and zymography showed that adhesives with MMP inhibitors had high affinity toward b
292 ion of high-performance thermoset resins and adhesives with potential utility in transportation and a
296 re we show a series of sustainable polymeric adhesives, with an eco-design, that perform in both dry
297 identified a number of EWs as potential anti-adhesives, with some as strain- or species-specific.