“…Subsequent work demonstrated the versatility of this azlactone-based approach as a means to coat and modify the interfacial properties of a variety of different materials and more complex substrates, including the surfaces of glass [54][55][56][57][58][59][60]143], soft materials (e.g., polymer-based substrates) [59,61], paper [62], cotton thread and commercial wound dressings (Figure 15.12e,f) [62], protein-based surfaces (e.g., horsehair) [62], inorganic microparticles (for the fabrication of hollow microcapsules Figure 15.12g,h) [63], and, owing to the ability to perform covalent assembly in organic solvents that are immiscible with water, liquid/liquid interfaces formed between organic and aqueous phases (for the fabrication of suspended membranes; Figure 15.12i) [64]. In each of these studies, the presence of amine-reactive azlactone functionality on the surface (or within the bulk) of the films provided a convenient and straightforward platform for further postfabrication modification of surface properties by exposure to a broad range of different amine-functionalized molecules (including amine-functionalized small molecules [54,55,[57][58][59][60][61][62][63], proteins [55,61], peptides [65], functional polymers [61], and amine-functionalized droplets of thermotropic liquid crystals [56]).…”