Publications by authors named "Fangbei Liu"

The distinct molecular states - single molecule, assembly, and aggregate - of two ionic macromolecules, TPPE-APOSS and TPE-APOSS, are easily distinguishable through their tunable fluorescence emission wavelengths, which reflect variations in intermolecular distances. Both ionic macromolecules contain aggregation-induced emission (AIE) active moieties whose emission wavelengths are directly correlated to their mutual distances in solution: far away from each other as individual molecules, maintaining a tunable and relatively long distance in electrostatic interactions-controlled blackberry-type assemblies (microphase separation), or approaching van der Waals close distance in aggregates (macrophase separation). Furthermore, within the blackberry assemblies, the emission wavelength decreases monotonically with increasing assembly size, indicative of shorter intermolecular distances at nanoscale.

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Thermo- and photoresponsive nanoreactors based on shell cross-linked micelles (SCMs) for the rhodium-catalyzed asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) of ketones have been developed from poly(2-oxazoline) triblock terpolymers. The nanoreactors incorporate thermoresponsive poly(2-isopropyl-2-oxazoline) as the hydrophilic corona and are covalently cross-linked with a photoswitchable spiropyran molecule. UV irradiation or changes in temperature trigger morphology switching of the polymer-based nanoreactors that alters the hydrophobicity in separate layers of the SCMs, resulting in dynamic substrate selectivity of the ATH in water.

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We describe the substrate-selective asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of aromatic ketones using rhodium complexes immobilized on a photoresponsive nanoreactor. The nanoreactor switches its morphology upon light irradiation in a wavelength-selective manner. Kinetic studies show that the gated behavior in the cross-linking layer is key to discriminating among substrates and reagents during catalysis.

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The development of nonorthogonal tandem catalysis enables the use of a combination of arbitrary catalysts to rapidly synthesize complex products in a substainable, efficient, and timely manner. The key is to compartmentalise the molecular catalysts, thereby overcoming inherent incompatibilities between individual catalysts or reaction conditions. This tutorial review analyses the development of the past two decades in the field of nonorthogonal tandem catalysis with an emphasis on compartmentalisation strategies.

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We report herein that dendron-shaped macromolecules AB crystallize into well-ordered pyramid-like structures from mixed solvents, instead of spherical motifs with curved structures, as found in the bulk. The design of the asymmetric molecular architecture and the choice of mixed solvents are applied as strategies to manipulate the crystallization process. In mixed solvents, the solvent selection for the Janus macromolecule and the existence of dominant crystalline clusters contribute to the formation of flat nanosheets.

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