Edge modification facilitated heterogenization and exfoliation of two-dimensional nanomaterials for cancer catalytic therapy.
Liqun ChenZhuo MaoYang WangYong KangYing WangLin MeiXiaoyuan JiPublished in: Science advances (2022)
The rapid recombination of electron-hole pairs and limited substrates are the most critical factors astricting the effect of catalytic therapy. Thus, two-dimensional interplanar heterojunction (BiOCl/Bi 2 O 3 ) that prolongs the lifetime of excited electrons and holes and extends the selectivity of substrates under ultrasound irradiation is prepared to facilitate high-performance cancer therapy. An edge modification displacing marginal BiOCl to Bi 2 O 3 is proposed to construct the interplanar heterojunction, promoting ultrathin nanosheets exfoliation due to the enhanced edge affinity with H 2 O. The spontaneously aligning Fermi levels mediate a built-in electric field-guided Z-scheme interplanar heterojunction, retard electron-hole pairs recombination, and improve redox potentials. Hence, these high-powered electrons and holes are capable of catalyzing diverse and stable substrates, such as the reduction reactions, O 2 → ·O 2 - and CO 2 → CO, and oxidation reactions, GSH → GSSG and H 2 O → ·OH. The Z-scheme interplanar heterojunction with the extending substrates selectivity completely breaks the tumor microenvironment limitation, exhibiting high anticancer activity.
Keyphrases
- solar cells
- visible light
- perovskite solar cells
- cancer therapy
- dna damage
- dna repair
- electron transfer
- magnetic resonance imaging
- drug delivery
- stem cells
- hydrogen peroxide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- quantum dots
- radiation therapy
- computed tomography
- squamous cell
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- fluorescent probe
- ultrasound guided
- radiation induced
- reduced graphene oxide
- gold nanoparticles
- bone marrow