Zoe M. Wright
Carnegie Mellon University
10 Papers
3 Citations
Zoe M. Wright is an academic researcher from Carnegie Mellon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Methacrylate & Cyanoacrylate. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications.
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Papers
Functional Graphenic Materials, Graphene Oxide, and Graphene as Scaffolds for Bone Regeneration
Zoe M. Wright,Anne M. Arnold,Brian D. Holt,Karoline E. Eckhart,Stefanie A. Sydlik +4 more
- 01 Jun 2019
TL;DR: Graphene, graphene oxide (GO), and functional graphenic materials (FGMs) have a variety of interesting properties that make them promising foundations on which to craft sophisticated, biomimetic, osteo-inductive, synthetic scaffolds for bone regeneration.
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Injectable amine functionalized graphene and chondroitin sulfate hydrogel with potential for cartilage regeneration
TL;DR: Johnson-Claisen rearrangement chemistry was performed on graphene oxide to enable functionalization with a primary amine covalently bound to the graphenic backbone through a chemically stable linker, which has potential to improve clinical outcomes of patients with cartilage damage.
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Teaching Polymer Theory through the Living Polymerization and Characterization of Poly(methyl methacrylate) and Poly(butyl methacrylate) Homo- and Copolymers
TL;DR: In this paper, a semester-long learning module designed to equip students with the analytical and practical skills necessary to be successful in an interdisciplinary polymer research environment is described, which is similar to our course.
12
Hands-On Laboratory Experience Using Adhesives for Remote Learning of Polymer Chemistry
Stephen J. Schmidt,Zoe M. Wright,Karoline E. Eckhart,Francesca A. Starvaggi,W. Vickery,M. E. Wolf,M. Pitts,T. Warner,T. Taofik,M. Ng,C. Colliver,Stefanie A. Sydlik +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use household adhesives as a platform for teaching polymer chemistry outside of the laboratory, including polymer synthesis, intermolecular interactions, thermomechanical properties, structure-function relationships, and molecular design.
8
Therapeutic Acrylates as Enhanced Medical Adhesives
Stefanie A. Sydlik,Zoe M. Wright +1 more
TL;DR: Provided herein are therapeutic acrylate compounds useful as medical adhesives, comprising a therapeutic agent covalently linked to a methacrylate or cyanoacRYlate moiety.