In
this work, surface-supportive MIL-88B(Fe) was explored as a
pH-stimuli thin film to release ibuprofen as a model drug. We used
surface plasmon resonance microscopy to study the pH-responsive behaviors
of MIL-88B(Fe) film in real time. A dissociation constant of (6.10
± 0.86) × 10–3 s–1 was
measured for the MIL-88B(Fe) film in an acidic condition (pH 6.3),
which is about 10 times higher than the dissociation of the same film
in a neutral pH condition. MIL-88B(Fe) films are also capable of loading
around 6.0 μg/cm2 of ibuprofen, which was measured
using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). Drug release profiles were
compared in both acidic and neutral pH conditions (pH 6.3 and 7.4)
using a QCM cell to model the drug release in healthy body systems
and those containing inflammatory tissues or cancerous tumors. It
was found that the amount of drug released in acidic environments
had been significantly higher compared to that in a neutral system
within 55 h of testing time. The pH-sensitive chemical bond breaking
between Fe3+ and the carboxylate ligands is the leading
cause of drug release in acidic conditions. This work exhibits the
potential of using MOF thin films as pH-triggered drug delivery systems.
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