pagulaste
Pagulaste is a self-organizing process observed in certain soft-matter systems in which modular building blocks assemble into extended, two-dimensional lattice networks at interfaces, such as air–water or fluid–substrate boundaries. The resulting structures exhibit regular porosity and tunable spacing that depend on the nature of the building blocks and the conditions of assembly.
Pagulaste proceeds through reversible, non-covalent interactions among constituents—hydrogen bonding, π–π stacking, hydrophobic effects, or metal–ligand coordination—that allow
Common building blocks include amphiphilic molecules, colloidal nanoparticles, or molecular cages with complementary binding motifs. The
Pagulaste networks typically exhibit notable porosity, mechanical resilience, and selective permeability, enabling applications in filtration, catalysis,
See also: self-assembly, supramolecular chemistry, porous materials.