| Literature DB >> 31019908 |
Mariia S Saveleva1,2, Karaneh Eftekhari1, Anatolii Abalymov2, Timothy E L Douglas3, Dmitry Volodkin4, Bogdan V Parakhonskiy1, Andre G Skirtach1.
Abstract
Hybrid materials, or hybrids incorporating both organic and inorganic constituents, are emerging as a very potent and promising class of materials due to the diverse, but complementary nature of the properties inherent of these different classes of materials. The complementarity leads to a perfect synergy of properties of desired material and eventually an end-product. The diversity of resultant properties and materials used in the construction of hybrids, leads to a very broad range of application areas generated by engaging very different research communities. We provide here a general classification of hybrid materials, wherein organics-in-inorganics (inorganic materials modified by organic moieties) are distinguished from inorganics-in-organics (organic materials or matrices modified by inorganic constituents). In the former area, the surface functionalization of colloids is distinguished as a stand-alone sub-area. The latter area-functionalization of organic materials by inorganic additives-is the focus of the current review. Inorganic constituents, often in the form of small particles or structures, are made of minerals, clays, semiconductors, metals, carbons, and ceramics. They are shown to be incorporated into organic matrices, which can be distinguished as two classes: chemical and biological. Chemical organic matrices include coatings, vehicles and capsules assembled into: hydrogels, layer-by-layer assembly, polymer brushes, block co-polymers and other assemblies. Biological organic matrices encompass bio-molecules (lipids, polysaccharides, proteins and enzymes, and nucleic acids) as well as higher level organisms: cells, bacteria, and microorganisms. In addition to providing details of the above classification and analysis of the composition of hybrids, we also highlight some antagonistic yin-&-yang properties of organic and inorganic materials, review applications and provide an outlook to emerging trends.Entities:
Keywords: cells; hybrid; hydrogels; inorganic; lipids; nanoparticles; organic; polymers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31019908 PMCID: PMC6459030 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Graphical AbstractHybrid Inorganics-in-Organics Materials.
Figure 1General classification of hybrid materials incorporating both organic and inorganic components. Functionalization of inorganic materials (the base material or matrix) by organic molecules, referred to as organics-in-organics, is shown on the left-hand side (shown in gray-dashed lines out outline the overall hierarchy of hybrids, but without being the focus of this research). Incorporation of inorganic constituents or components into organic materials (matrices) is referred to as inorganics-in-organics and is shown on the right-hand side (shown in solid dark lines, being the focus of this overview). The composition of inorganics-in-organics is outlined in a separate panel (right-hand side, in the middle). The bottom row depicts schematics of actual materials for each corresponding category of hybrids.
Figure 2Classification of selected major classes of inorganic (left) and organic (right) components of hybrid materials as depicted by electron microscopy images. The inorganic constituents: minerals (SEM image of the calcium carbonate particles reproduced from Parakhonskiy et al., 2012 with permission Wiley-VCH), clays (TEM image of halloysites, reproduced from Fix et al., 2009 with permission Wiley-VCH), metals (TEM image of metal nanoparticles, reproduced from Simakin et al., 2019 with permission the ACS), semiconductors (TEM image of CdSe based nanocrystals, reproduced from Franzl et al., 2007), carbons (SEM image of carbon nanotubes, reproduced from Niazov-Elkan et al., 2018 with permission Wiley-VCH), ceramics (SEM images of TiO2, which is used in ceramics and reproduced from Weir et al., 2012 with permission of the ACS). The organic matrices are represented by the following chemical: polymers (SEM image of the polycaprolactone scaffold reproduced from Savelyeva et al., 2017 with permission Wiley-Blackwell), hydrogels (an optical photograph of the Image of an DNA hydrogel removed from atubeonapipette tip reproduced from Xu et al., 2017 with permission Wiley-VCH), LbL (SEM image of a polyelectrolyte capsule reproduced from Bedard et al., 2009c with permission the Royal Society of Chemistry), brushes (AFM image of the brush polymer film, reproduced from Lemieux et al., 2003 with permission of the ACS), block copolymers [TEM image micelles formed by amphiphilic diblock co-polymer poly(ethylene glycol)-block-polystyrene-PS310 reproduced from (Geng et al., 2016) with permission of Wiley-VCH]; and biological: lipids (TEM image of liposomes, reproduced from Ruozi et al., 2011 with permission of Dove Medical Press), proteins (TEM image of the BSA, reproduced from Longchamp et al., 2017 with permission of the Natl. Acad. Sci.), carbohydrates (TEM image of pectin, reproduced from Hernandez-Cerdan et al., 2018 with permission of the ACS), nucleic acids (TEM image of DNA brick Cuboid structure assembly, reproduced from Wei et al., 2014 with permission from Wiley-VCH) materials.
Figure 3Various modifications of organic matrices by inorganic components classified according to their applications. The left-hand schematics shows a more general range of applications of hybrid materials, in which inorganic constituents are added to organic matrices, including: biomineralization, biomimetics, retartation of flames, antibacterial properties and catalysis, fuel and solar cells, packaging and applications in dentistry, sensors and membranes, release from drug delivery vehicles, cells or delivery into cells, enhancement of mechanical properties, electrical and thermal conductivity. The right-hand images illustrate selected objects assembled by incorporating inorganic constituents in organic materials for: enhancement of mechanical properties (Optical image of the cell adhesion behavior and the film surface morphology for different AuNP surface coverage, reproduced from Schmidt et al., 2012 with permission of the ACS), sensoric functions (SEM image of BSE on hydroxyapatite with silver nanoparticles as SERS platform, reproduced from Parakhonskiy et al., 2014 with permission of Elsevier Science BV), electroconductivity (SEM images of the surface of CNT/PS nanocomposites, reproduced from Grossiord et al., 2008 with permission of Wiley-VCH), remote release by an external action of a laser (TEM images of the shell of the polyelectrolyte capsule with Ag-nanoparticles, reproduced from Skirtach et al., 2004 with permission of the ACS); biomimetics (SEM image of the Polycaprolactone scaffolds mineralized with vaterite, reproduced from Savelyeva et al., 2017 with permission of Wiley-Blackwell), catalysis (TEM images of poly(N-vinylcaprolactam-co- acetoacetoxyethyl methacrylate-co-acrylic acid) P(VCL-AAEM-AAc) microgels reproduced from (Agrawal et al., 2013) with permission of the Royal Society of Chemistry), flame retardation (SEM images of polyurethane foam, with 3-bilayer halloysite nanotubes coatings, reproduced from Smith et al., 2018 with permission from the Wiley VCH); packaging (SEM images of zein-Kaolin nanocomposites containing 2.5% Kaolin, reproduced from Arora and Padua, 2010 with permission from Wiley-Blackwell); solar cells (cross-sectional SEM image of a complete perovskite device, reproduced from Jeon et al., 2014 with permission of Nature Publish. Group).
Figure 4Mechanical properties (Youngs' modulus) of various constituents of organic-inorganic hybrid materials in relation to those of cells, tissue, and organs. Data are based on Kuznetsova et al. (2007) and Moeendarbary and Harris (2014).
Figure 5Antagonist (yin and yang), but complementary, properties of most common inorganic and organic compounds motivating their incorporation into hybrid materials.
Selected examples of hybrid inorganics-in-organics coatings presenting the composition, feature/functionalities and corresponding references.
| Polymers | PLGA | Hydroxyapatite | Enhanced mechanical properties (Kang et al., |
| Polyaspartate | CaCO3 | Biomimetics (Sommerdijk and De With, | |
| PLL | Silica NP | Morphology control of biomimetics (Tomczak et al., | |
| PLA | Organoclays | Biodegradable bioplastics (Kasuga et al., | |
| PSS (polystyrene sulfonate) | TiO2 | Catalysis, environmental applications (Priya et al., | |
| PCL | Hydroxyapatite | Stem cell growth (Priya et al., | |
| Cellulose | AgNP | Antibacterial properties (Perez-Masia et al., | |
| Silk fibroin | AuNP | Redox activity (Kharlampieva et al., | |
| Silk fibroin | Graphene | Enhancement of mechanical properties (Wang et al., | |
| Latex | Carbon nanotubes | Electroconductivity increase (Grossiord et al., | |
| PMMA, PVA, PLA, PAN, PBO, PA6, PDMS, epoxy | Carbon nanotubes | Reinforcement and theory of fiber reinforced composites (Coleman et al., | |
| PDMS-elastomer | Magnetic iron powder | Tuning surface roughness, wettability (Glavan et al., | |
| Styrene-butyl acrylate | Carbon black | Vibrational damping and electrical conductivity (Hu and Chung, | |
| MDMO-PPV | ZnO | Solar energy (Beek et al., | |
| Various polymers | Metal/metal oxide | Membrane and filtration (Tripathi and Shahi, | |
| Hydrogels | Silk based injectable hydrogels | Hydroxyapatite | Enhancement of mechanics (Young's modulus 21 kPa), osteo-differentiation (Ding et al., |
| Elastomeric (pHEMA) hydrogels | Hydroxyapatite | Stem cell differentiation (Song et al., | |
| Various hydrogels | Hydroxyapatite | Biomineralization (Cai and Tang, | |
| Gellan gum | CaCO3 | Biomineralization (Douglas et al., | |
| Gellan gum | Montmorrilo-nite | Composition control (Lvov et al., | |
| LbL polymers | PEI/PDADMAC/PAA | AuNP | Optical properties (Malikova et al., |
| PSS/PAH | AgNP | Remote laser activation and release (Skirtach et al., | |
| PSS/PAH, PSS/PDADMAC | AuNP | Remote laser activation (Radt et al., | |
| PSS/PAH PDADMAC/montmorrilonite | Quantum dots | Sensors (Kharlampieva et al., | |
| AgNP | Mechanical and antibacterial properties (Cheng et al., | ||
| PMAA (poly(methacrylic acid) | AuNR | Sensors (pH) (Kozlovskaya et al., | |
| PLL/HA | AuNP | Sensitivity to laser and enhanced mechanical properties (Volodkin et al., | |
| PSS/PAH | Graphene oxide | Enhancement of mechanical properties (Kulkarni et al., | |
| IL-NH2 | Graphene | Electro-catalysis (Zhu et al., | |
| PSS/PAH | Halloysite | Novel functionalization (Konnova et al., | |
| PUF/PEI/PAA | Halloysite | Flame retardant (Smith et al., | |
| PMMA/PS | Halloysite | Wear resistance (Song et al., | |
| PEI/PAA | TiO2 | Dye- solar cells (Chen et al., | |
| PSS/NTA (nickel-nitrillotriacetic acid) | TiO2 | Desorption of proteins (Andreeva et al., | |
| PSS with PEI as support | TiO2 | Hydrophilic to hydrophobic conversion (Lu and Hu, | |
| PLA | Montmorrilo-nite | Mechanical properties (Svagan et al., | |
| PSS/PAH | CNT | Mechanical properties and release (Yashchenok et al., | |
| PSS/PAH and alginate | AuNP | Hydra, metazoan (Anbrosone et al., | |
| Polymer brushes | P2-VP | AuNP | pH sensing (Tokareva et al., |
| Brushes | PtNP | Sensors (Mei et al., | |
| Brushes | AgNP | Sensors (Lu et al., | |
| Brushes | AuNP | Sensors (Lu et al., | |
| P2-VP | CdSe | Sensors (Ionov et al., | |
| Block co-polymers and polymer-somes | Poly(trimethylene carbonate)- | Magnetic nanoparticles | Magnetic resonance imaging and magneto-chemotherapy (Sanson et al., |
| PNIPAM-based | Magnetic nanoparticles | Triggered release (Bixner et al., | |
| PEG-PPO-PEG, PEG-PBD; PS-b-PAA | Magnetic nanoparticles | MR contrast agent (Yan et al., | |
| Chitosan and heparin | Gold layer | Propulsion and therapy (Shao et al., | |
| Lipids | Liposomes | AuNP | Multiple reports on permeability changes and release of contents (Wu et al., |
| Lipid bilayer membranes | AuNR, AuNP | Ion current modulation of by laser-AuNP and AuNR (Palankar et al., | |
| Liposomes (DOPC) | SiO2, ZnO, TiO2, Fe3O4 | Light-controlled release (Wang and Liu, | |
| Lipid membranes, phospholipids, phosphate-dylcholine, liposomes | Magnetic NP | Targeted delivery and permeability control (Chen et al., | |
| Membrane of red blood cells | AuNP | Remote laser activation and release (Delcea et al., | |
| Exosomes | AuNP | Diagnostics (Stremersch et al., | |
| Inside living cells | AuNP-polymeric capsules & AuNP | Release from AuNP-functionalized capsules: a) inside HeLa cells (Javier et al., | |
| On membrane of living cells | AuNP | Delivery of biomolecules from outside inside neurons (Xiong et al., | |
| On membrane of cancer cells | AuNP | Destruction of leukemia cells (Lapotko et al., | |
| • Proteins | Alginate, pectin, carrageenan, xanthan | Montmorillo-nite, sepiolite, CNT | Enhancement of mechanical properties, sensors (Eduardo Ruiz-Hitzky (Editor) 2008) |
| Pectin | Nanoclay | Environmentally friendly packaging (Vartiainen et al., | |
| Actin | Magnetic particles | Microrheology (Ziemann et al., | |
| Galactose | CNT | Pathogen binding (Xia et al., | |
| PVA | CoO, BiFeO3 | Dielectric CoO (Das et al., | |
| Gelatin, collagen | Hydroxyapatite | Good cell response of stem cells (Raucci et al., | |
| Alginate | Sr | Tissue engineering (Catanzano et al., | |
| Gelatin, collagen, zein | Clay | Enhanced properties (Alcantara et al., | |
| Layered double hydroxides | Biocomposite non-viral vector (Desigaux et al., | ||
| Chitosan | AuNP | Biosensors (Rocha-Santos, | |
| Montmorillo-nite | Enhancement stability (Wang et al., | ||
| CaCO3 | Biomimetics (Yao et al., | ||
| Hydroxyapatite | Control of properties (Ren et al., | ||
| DNA | AuNP | Sensors based on aggregation of NP (Storhoff et al., | |
| DNA | AuNP | Nanostoves for melting DNA (Stehr et al., | |
| Nucleic acids | Layered double hydroxides | Gene transfection (Kundu et al., | |
| Red blood cells | Interior | Magnetic nanoparticles | Contrast for MRI (Brähler et al., |
| Red blood cells | Surface modification | AuNP | Release by laser light (Delcea et al., |
| Bacteria | Surface modification | AgNP, AuNP | Sensing and detection (Zhou et al., |
| Cells (living) | Surface functionalization | AuNP | Delivery of biomolecules from outside inside neurons (Xiong et al., |
| Cancer cells | Surface functionalization | AuNP | Destruction of leukemia cells (Lapotko et al., |
| Other: dentures-polymers | Composites and polymers | Silicon dioxide | Filling in dentistry (Jafari et al., |
| Other: films | Hexadmethyldisiloxane | Quartz-like | Plasma-induced switching from organic to inorganic (Morent et al., |