2 research outputs found
Kinetics of Polymer Desorption from Colloids Probed by Aggregation-Induced Emission Fluorophore
Polymer adsorption
and desorption are fundamental in many industrial
and biomedical applications. Here, we introduce a new method to monitor
the polymer desorption kinetics in situ based on the behavior of aggregation-induced
emission. Poly(ethylene oxide) and colloidal silica (SiO<sub>2</sub>) were used as a model system. It was found that the aggregation-induced
emission method could be successfully used to determine the polymer
desorption kinetics, and the polymer desorption followed the first-order
kinetics. It was also found that the polymer desorption rate constant
decreased with the increasing molecular weight, which could be described
by a power law function <i>k</i><sub>d</sub> ≈ <i>M</i><sup>–0.28</sup>, close to that of the adsorption
rate constant
Aggregation-Induced Emission Nanoparticles Encapsulated with PEGylated Nano Graphene Oxide and Their Applications in Two-Photon Fluorescence Bioimaging and Photodynamic Therapy <i>in Vitro</i> and <i>in Vivo</i>
Aggregation-induced emission (AIE)
nanoparticles have been shown
promise for fluorescence bioimaging and photodynamic therapy due to
the good combination of nanoparticles and organic dyes or photosensitizers.
Among several kinds of AIE nanoparticles, those that are capsulated
with nanographene oxides (NGO) are easy to make, size-tunable, and
have proven to be very stable in deionized water. However, the stability
in saline solution still needs improvement for further applications
in chemical or biomedical fields, and the efficacy of photodynamic
therapy using NGO-capsulate AIE photosensitizers has not been evaluated
yet. Herein, we modified NGO with polyethylene glycol (PEG) to improve
the stability of NGO-capsulated AIE nanoparticles in phosphate buffer
saline. Furthermore, by combining this modification method with
a dual-functional molecule which has both typical AIE property
and photosensitizing ability, we performed both two-photon fluorescence
bioimaging and photodynamic therapy <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i>. Our work shows that AIE nanoparticles capsulated
with PEGylated nanographene oxide can be a powerful tool for future
bioimaging and photodynamic therapy applications