Authors
Ludvig Lizana, Zoran Konkoli, Brigitte Bauer, Aldo Jesorka, Owe Orwar
Publication date
2009/5/5
Source
Annual review of physical chemistry
Volume
60
Pages
449-468
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
Scientific literature dealing with the rates, mechanisms, and thermodynamic properties of chemical reactions in condensed media almost exclusively assumes that reactions take place in volumes that do not change over time. The reaction volumes are compact (such as a sphere, a cube, or a cylinder) and do not vary in shape. In this review article, we discuss two important systems at small length scales (∼10 nm to 5 μm), in which these basic assumptions are violated. The first system exists in cell biology and is represented by the tiniest functional components (i.e., single cells, organelles, and other physically delineated cellular microenvironments). The second system comprises nanofluidic devices, in particular devices made from soft-matter materials such as lipid nanotube-vesicle networks. In these two systems, transport, mixing, and shape changes can be achieved at or very close to thermal energy levels. In …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
L Lizana, Z Konkoli, B Bauer, A Jesorka, O Orwar - Annual review of physical chemistry, 2009