“…Self-assembly processes in nature involve components at all scales and typically exist in the states that are at global or local nonequilibrium and dissipate energy. , In synthetic systems, the biomimetic nonequilibrium assembly/disassembly − with promising applications in drug delivery, , catalysis, , sensing, molecular imaging, , self-healing, − and transient electronics is mainly achieved by time-dependent consumption of chemical fuels. − Till now, many advances have been made in chemically fueled transient assembling systems with microscopic building blocks (e.g., molecules, colloids) ,,, that can construct various transient structures and materials ,− based on temporally controlled redox reactions, , pH changes, − and formation and hydrolysis of metastable esters or anhydrides. ,,, By contrast, macroscopic nonequilibrium assembly/disassembly is in its infancy, and one of the few examples was presented in our previous work, where a pH-regulated and temporally controlled system was designed for achieving the precise transient assembly of hybrid hydrogels . Despite these achievements, the accumulation of waste has always been a problem in both microscopic and macroscopic nonequilibrium assembly/disassembly because the response can be damped by waste accumulation , and the waste may additionally influence the packing of the self-assembled structures. , Therefore, novel strategies and new chemical fuels for efficient waste removal or waste-free regulation represent an important direction in the development of nonequilibrium systems.…”