| Literature DB >> 28809796 |
Mariia S Saveleva1,2, Ekaterina V Lengert3,4, Dmitry A Gorin5, Bogdan V Parakhonskiy6, Andre G Skirtach7.
Abstract
Membranes are important components in a number of systems, where separation and control of the flow of molecules is desirable. Controllable membranes represent an even more coveted and desirable entity and their development is considered to be the next step of development. Typically, membranes are considered on flat surfaces, but spherical capsules possess a perfect "infinite" or fully suspended membranes. Similarities and transitions between spherical and flat membranes are discussed, while applications of membranes are also emphasized.Entities:
Keywords: induced release; layer-by-layer membranes; microcapsules; permeability of membranes
Year: 2017 PMID: 28809796 PMCID: PMC5618129 DOI: 10.3390/membranes7030044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Membranes (Basel) ISSN: 2077-0375
Figure 1Schematic of a transition from flat membranes (real membranes depicted in the left-hand rectangle) to fully suspended membranes of microcapsules.
Summary of different mechanisms used for controlling the permeability between different types of membranes. Further, abbreviations of polymers used as membrane materials: PAH, poly(allylamine hydrochloride); PSS, poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid) sodium salt); MF, melamineformaldehyde; HA, hyaluronic acid; PLL, poly(l-lysine); DES, dextran sulfate; PVS, poly(vinyl sulfate); PLGA, poly(lactic-co-lycolic acid); PDADMA, poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride); P(Am-DDA), poly(acrylamide-co-diallyl-dimethylammonium chloride.
| Technique of Release | Membrane Material | Functionalization | Core/Template |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laser-induced, laser heating | PAH/PSS | Ag nanoparticles [ | MF latex particles [ |
| Alginate | Ag nanoparticles [ | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| Phospholipids [ | Au nanoparticles [ | – | |
| Poly(arginine)/DES | Fe3O4 nanoparticles and Au nanoparticles [ | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| NIR irradiation | PAH/PSS Witepsol W 31 (W/O/W emulsion) [ | Gold nanoparticles [ | Porous polycarbonate membrane [ |
| Ultrasonic irradiation | PAH/PSS | ZnO particles [ | CaCO3 particles [ |
| Silver alginate | Ag nanopartiles [ | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| pH-induced | PAH/PSS | – | CaCO3 particles [ |
| PLL/DES [ | – | PLGA [ | |
| PAH/PVS [ | – | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| PAH/DES [ | – | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| PAH/nucleic acid [ | – | CaCO3 particles [ | |
| Alginate/Poly-L-ysine | Au nanoparticles [ | Fe-SiO2 [ | |
| Magnetic Field | PDADMA/PSS [ | Iron oxide nanocubes [ | Fe(CO)5@SiO2 [ |
| Microwave irradiation | PAH/PSS | Au nanoparticles [ | CaCO3 particles [ |
| Induced by nonionic surfactant | Chitosan/alginate [ | – | Liposomes [ |
Figure 2(A) The Ag-nanoparticle-doped capsule is intact before the interaction (a), and after the interaction (b) with the laser beam of 25 mW [23]. Copyright 2004 American Chemical Society; (B) Confocal microscope images demonstrating remote release of encapsulated cargo from a polyelectrolyte multilayer capsule containing metal nanoparticles in its walls [48]. Copyright 2005 American Chemical Society. (C) Remote release from microcapsules triggered by laser-induced opening channels on microcapsule membrane modified with nanoparticles. Profiles in the left upper corner are drawn along the green line. Scale bars correspond to 5 μm [50]. Copyright 2008 American Chemical Society.
Figure 3The influence of NPs distribution on absorption spectrum of microcapsules with NPs-modified shell. (a) Absorption spectrum for nonaggregated NPs and corresponding, (b) TEM image of nonaggregated NPs on a microcapsule, and (c) CLSM image of microcapsules; (d) Absorption spectrum for aggregated NPs and corresponding, (e) TEM image of aggregated NPs on a microcapsule, and (f) CLSM image of microcapsules [54]. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 4Scheme of the setup to perform the nanopore approach experiment for observation of traffic through lipid membranes. (A) Side view of the scheme of the experiment allowing observation and (B) images (top view) demonstrating the laser alignment on the glass chip [59]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society.