24 research outputs found
Organic Solvent-Free, One-Step Engineering of Graphene-Based Magnetic-Responsive Hybrids Using Design of Experiment-Driven Mechanochemistry
In this study, we propose an organic
solvent-free, one-step mechanochemistry approach to engineer water-dispersible
graphene oxide/superparamagnetic iron oxide (GO/SPIOs) hybrids, for
biomedical applications. Although mechanochemistry has been proposed
in the graphene field for applications such as drug loading, exfoliation
or polymer-composite formation, this is the first study to report
mechanochemistry for preparation of GO/SPIOs hybrids. The statistical
design of experiment (DoE) was employed to control the process parameters.
DoE has been used to control formulation processes of other types
of nanomaterials. The implementation of DoE for controlling the formulation
processes of graphene-based nanomaterials is, however, novel. DoE
approach could be of advantage as one can tailor GO-based hybrids
of predicted yields and compositions. Hybrids were characterized by
TEM, AFM FT-IR, Raman spectroscopy, and TGA. The dose–response
magnetic resonance (MR) properties were confirmed by MR imaging of
phantoms. The biocompatibility of the hybrids with A549 and J774 cell
lines was confirmed by the modified LDH assay