4 research outputs found
Sprayable Adhesive Nanotherapeutics: Mussel-Protein-Based Nanoparticles for Highly Efficient Locoregional Cancer Therapy
Following
surgical resection for primary treatment of solid tumors,
systemic chemotherapy is commonly used to eliminate residual cancer
cells to prevent tumor recurrence. However, its clinical outcome is
often limited due to insufficient local accumulation and the systemic
toxicity of anticancer drugs. Here, we propose a sprayable adhesive
nanoparticle (NP)-based drug delivery system using a bioengineered
mussel adhesive protein (MAP) for effective locoregional cancer therapy.
The MAP NPs could be administered to target surfaces in a surface-independent
manner through a simple and easy spray process by virtue of their
unique adhesion ability and sufficient dispersion property. Doxorubicin
(DOX)-loaded MAP NPs (MAP@DOX NPs) exhibited efficient cellular uptake,
endolysosomal trafficking, and subsequent low pH microenvironment-induced
DOX release in cancer cells. The locally sprayed MAP@DOX NPs showed
a significant inhibition of tumor growth <i>in vivo</i>,
resulting from the prolonged retention of the MAP@DOX NPs on the tumor
surface. Thus, this adhesive MAP NP-based spray therapeutic system
provides a promising approach for topical drug delivery in adjuvant
cancer therapy
Impact of Organic Molecule-Induced Charge Transfer on Operating Voltage Control of Both n‑MoS<sub>2</sub> and p‑MoTe<sub>2</sub> Transistors
Since transition
metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors are
found as two-dimensional van der Waals materials with a discrete energy
bandgap, many TMD based field effect transistors (FETs) are reported
as prototype devices. However, overall reports indicate that threshold
voltage (Vth) of those FETs are located
far away from 0 V whether the channel is p- or n-type. This definitely
causes high switching voltage and unintended OFF-state leakage current.
Here, a facile way to simultaneously modulate the Vth of both p- and n-channel FETs with TMDs is reported.
The deposition of various organic small molecules on the channel results
in charge transfer between the organic molecule and TMD channels.
Especially, HAT-CN molecule is found to ideally work for both p- and
n-channels, shifting their Vth toward
0 V concurrently. As a proof of concept, a complementary metal oxide
semiconductor (CMOS) inverter with p-MoTe2 and n-MoS2 channels shows superior voltage gain and minimal power consumption
after HAT-CN deposition, compared to its initial performance. When
the same TMD FETs of the CMOS structure are integrated into an OLED
pixel circuit for ambipolar switching, the circuit with HAT-CN film
demonstrates complete ON/OFF switching of OLED pixel, which was not
switched off without HAT-CN
Impact of Organic Molecule-Induced Charge Transfer on Operating Voltage Control of Both n‑MoS<sub>2</sub> and p‑MoTe<sub>2</sub> Transistors
Since transition
metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors are
found as two-dimensional van der Waals materials with a discrete energy
bandgap, many TMD based field effect transistors (FETs) are reported
as prototype devices. However, overall reports indicate that threshold
voltage (Vth) of those FETs are located
far away from 0 V whether the channel is p- or n-type. This definitely
causes high switching voltage and unintended OFF-state leakage current.
Here, a facile way to simultaneously modulate the Vth of both p- and n-channel FETs with TMDs is reported.
The deposition of various organic small molecules on the channel results
in charge transfer between the organic molecule and TMD channels.
Especially, HAT-CN molecule is found to ideally work for both p- and
n-channels, shifting their Vth toward
0 V concurrently. As a proof of concept, a complementary metal oxide
semiconductor (CMOS) inverter with p-MoTe2 and n-MoS2 channels shows superior voltage gain and minimal power consumption
after HAT-CN deposition, compared to its initial performance. When
the same TMD FETs of the CMOS structure are integrated into an OLED
pixel circuit for ambipolar switching, the circuit with HAT-CN film
demonstrates complete ON/OFF switching of OLED pixel, which was not
switched off without HAT-CN
Self-Assembled TaO<sub>X</sub>/2H-TaS<sub>2</sub> as a van der Waals Platform of a Multilevel Memristor Circuit Integrated with a β‑Ga<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> Transistor
Two-dimensional (2D)-layered material tantalum disulfide
(2H-TaS2) is known to be a van der Waals conductor at room
temperature.
Here, 2D-layered TaS2 has been partially oxidized by utraviolet-ozone
(UV-O3) annealing to form a 12-nm-thin TaOX on
conducting TaS2, so that the TaOX/2H-TaS2 structure might be self-assembled. Utilizing the TaOX/2H-TaS2 structure as a platform, each device of
a β-Ga2O3 channel MOSFET and a TaOX memristor has been successfully fabricated. An insulator
structure of Pt/TaOX/2H-TaS2 shows good a dielectric
constant (k ∼ 21) and strength (∼3
MV/cm) of achieved TaOX, which is enough to support a β-Ga2O3 transistor channel. Based on the quality of
TaOX and low trap density of the TaOX/β-Ga2O3 interface, which is achieved via another UV-O3 annealing, excellent device properties such as little hysteresis
(<∼0.04 V), band-like transport, and a steep subthreshold
swing of ∼85 mV/dec are achieved. With a Cu electrode on top
of the TaOX/2H-TaS2 structure, the TaOX acts as a memristor operating around ∼2 V for nonvolatile
bipolar and unipolar mode memories. The functionalities of the TaOX/2H-TaS2 platform become more distinguished finally
when the Cu/TaOX/2H-TaS2 memristor and β-Ga2O3 MOSFET are integrated to form a resistive memory
switching circuit. The circuit nicely demonstrates the multilevel
memory functions