| Literature DB >> 31841305 |
Jingwen Xu1, Ning Liu2, Di Wu1, Zhida Gao1, Yan-Yan Song1, Patrik Schmuki2.
Abstract
The low penetration depth of UV light in mammalian tissue is the critical limitation for the use of TiO2-based photocatalysis in biomedical applications. In this work, we develop an effective near-infrared (NIR)-active photocatalytic platform that consists of a shell structure of upconversion nanocrystals decorated on a core of Au/dark-TiO2. The heart of this system is the strong photocatalytic activity in the visible region enabled by the gold surface-plasmon resonance on dark TiO2 (D-TiO2). Simulation and experiment demonstrate for an optimized Au/D-TiO2 combination a highly enhanced light absorption in the visible range. Using ampicillin sodium (AMP) as model drug, we exemplify the effective use of this principle by demonstrating a NIR light-triggered photocatalytic payload release. Importantly, the photocatalytically generated reactive oxygen species can effectively inactivate AMP-resistant bacteria strains, thus maintaining an antibacterial effect even after all drug is released. Overall, we anticipate that the here-introduced NIR-light-active photocatalytic cascade can considerably widen TiO2-based photocatalysis and its applications into the infrared range.Entities:
Keywords: AMP-resistant bacteria; Ti3+ defects; near-infrared light; payload delivery; titanium dioxide
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31841305 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b05386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881