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Photothermally responsive Pickering emulsions stabilised by polydopamine nanobowls.

Shahinur ActerMark Louis P VidallonJoshua P KingBoon Mian TeoRico F Tabor
Published in: Journal of materials chemistry. B (2021)
Pickering emulsions with stimuli responsive properties have attracted mounting research attention owing to their potential for on-demand destabilisation of emulsions. However, a combination of biocompatibility and long-term stability are essential to efficiently apply such systems in biomedical applications, and this remains a significant challenge. To address current limitations, here we report the formation of photothermally responsive oil-in-water (o/w) Pickering emulsions fabricated using biocompatible stabilisers and showing prolonged stability. For the first time, we explore polydopamine (PDA) bowl-shaped mesoporous nanoparticles (PDA nanobowls) as a Pickering stabiliser without any surface modification or other stabiliser present. As-prepared PDA nanobowl-stabilised Pickering emulsions are shown to be pH responsive, and more significantly show high photothermal efficiency under near-infrared illumination due the incorporation of PDA into the system, which has remarkable photothermal response. These biocompatible, photothermally responsive o/w Pickering emulsion systems show potential in controlled drug release applications stimulated by NIR illumination.
Keyphrases
  • drug release
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • photodynamic therapy
  • working memory
  • ionic liquid
  • climate change
  • tissue engineering