Themed collection Materials Horizons 10 year Inaugural Authors Reflections

5 items
Commentary

A reflection on “Formation and processability of liquid crystalline dispersions of graphene oxide”

Jalili and Wallace reflect on one of their first Materials Horizons papers (Mater. Horiz., 2014, https://doi.org/10.1039/C3MH00050H) published in the journal and discuss how their work may have influenced the research field.

Graphical abstract: A reflection on “Formation and processability of liquid crystalline dispersions of graphene oxide”
Commentary

A reflection on ‘Highly dispersible polypyrrole nanospheres for advanced nanocomposite ultrafiltration membranes’

Lin and Kaner reflect on their group’;s Materials Horizons paper (Liao, Li and Kaner et al., Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/C3MH00049D) published in the journal and discuss how their work may have influenced the research field.

Graphical abstract: A reflection on ‘Highly dispersible polypyrrole nanospheres for advanced nanocomposite ultrafiltration membranes’
Commentary

A reflection on ‘The synthesis, structure and electronic properties of a lead-free hybrid inorganic–organic double perovskite (MA)2KBiCl6 (MA = methylammonium)’

Cheetham et al. reflect on one of their first Materials Horizons papers (Mater. Horiz., 2016, https://doi.org/10.1039/C6MH00053C) published in the journal and discuss how their work may have influenced the research field.

Graphical abstract: A reflection on ‘The synthesis, structure and electronic properties of a lead-free hybrid inorganic–organic double perovskite (MA)2KBiCl6 (MA = methylammonium)’
Commentary

A reflection on ‘A shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks’

Yu et al. reflect on their first Materials Horizons paper (Mater. Horiz., 2014, https://doi.org/10.1039/c3mh00040k) published in the inaugural issue of the journal, and discuss how their work may have influenced the research field over the past decade.

Graphical abstract: A reflection on ‘A shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks’
Commentary

A reflection on ‘Protein coronas suppress the hemolytic activity of hydrophilic and hydrophobic nanoparticles’

Rotello et al. reflect on their first Materials Horizons paper (Mater. Horiz., 2014, https://doi.org/10.1039/C3MH00075C) published in the inaugural issue of the journal, and discuss how their work may have influenced the research field over the past decade.

Graphical abstract: A reflection on ‘Protein coronas suppress the hemolytic activity of hydrophilic and hydrophobic nanoparticles’
5 items

About this collection

As one initiative to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Materials Horizons, we have invited back some of our inaugural authors who published with us during the launch of the journal 10 years ago to write a Reflection article; looking back at their previous publication and discussing how their work may have influenced the field and what they may have done differently had they had the hindsight of today. We hope that the articles featured in this collection will give an overview of some of the exciting and impactful research first published in the journal and we hope that you enjoy reading these Reflections.

Keep an eye out for additional articles being added throughout the year.

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