Oxygen Vacancy Defect Enhanced NIR-II Photothermal Performance of BiO x Cl Nanosheets for Combined Phototherapy of Cancer Guided by Multimodal Imaging.
Qianlan FangChengyuan HongZhusheng LiuYuning PanJie LinJianjun ZhengJingfeng ZhangTianxiang ChenXuehua MaAiguo WuPublished in: Advanced healthcare materials (2024)
Narrow photo-absorption range and low carrier utilization are significant barriers that restrict the antitumor efficiency of 2D bismuth oxyhalide (BiOX, X = Cl, Br, I) nanosheets (NSs). Introducing oxygen vacancy (OV) defects can expand the absorption range and improve carrier utilization, which are crucial but also challenging. In this study, a series of BiO x Cl NSs with different OV defect concentrations (x = 1, 0.7, 0.5) is developed, which shows full spectrum absorption and strong absorption in the second near-infrared region (NIR-II). Density functional theory calculations are utilized to calculate the crystal structure and density states of BiO x Cl, which confirm that part of the carriers is separated by OV enhanced internal electric field to improve carrier utilization. The carriers without redox reaction can be trapped in the OV, leading to great majority of photo-generated carriers promoting the photothermal performance. Triggered by single NIR-II (1064 nm), BiO x Cl NSs' bidirectional efficient utilization of carriers achieves synchronously combined phototherapy, leading to enhanced tumor ablation and multimodal diagnostic in vitro and vivo. It is thus believed that this work provides an innovative strategy to design and construct nanoplatforms of indirect band gap semiconductors for clinical phototheranostics.
Keyphrases
- photodynamic therapy
- density functional theory
- drug release
- crystal structure
- fluorescence imaging
- molecular dynamics
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- high resolution
- reduced graphene oxide
- fluorescent probe
- electron transfer
- papillary thyroid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gold nanoparticles
- metal organic framework
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiofrequency ablation
- transition metal