A general and facile method for water-dispersed noble metal (Au, Ag, Pd, Pt) nanocrystal modified MoS2 nanosheets (NM-MoS2 NSs) has been developed. By using sodium carboxymethyl cellulose as a stabilizer, well-dispersed NM-MoS2 NSs with homogeneously deposited noble metal nanocrystals (NM NCs) can be synthesized in aqueous solutions. Due to the transition from the semiconducting 2H phase to the metallic 1T phase, the chemically exfoliated MoS2 (ce-MoS2) NSs have improved electrochemical activity. The partially metallic nature of the ce-MoS2 NSs and the catalytic activity of the NM NCs synergistically make NM-MoS2 NSs a potential electrochemical catalyst. For the first time, Pd-MoS2 NSs were used as an electrocatalyst for methanol oxidation in alkaline media. The results showed that Pd-MoS2 NSs have enhanced catalytic activity with 2.8-fold anodic peak current mass density compared to a commercial Pd/C catalyst, suggesting potential for application in direct methanol fuel cells (DMFCs).
Cationic quaternary ammonium (QA) groups and reactive oxygen species as two main approaches for antibacterial study have been intensively studied. Herein, we report a multifunctional antimicrobial agent (porphyrin-POSS-OPVE, PPO), which combines bacterial membrane intercalation, high density of local QA groups, efficient energy transfer, significantly reduced aggregation, and high water solubility into one single molecule. The light-harvesting PPO contains multiple donor-absorbing arms (oligo( p-phenylenevinylene) electrolytes, OPVEs) on its globular periphery and a central porphyrin acceptor in the core by using three-dimensional nanocages (polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes, POSSs) as bridges. The antiaggregation ability of POSS and the highly efficient energy transfer from multiple OPVE arms to porphyrin could greatly amplify singlet oxygen generation in PPO. Particularly, OPVEs with QA terminal chains were able to intercalate into Escherichia coli membranes, which facilitated O diffusion and bacterial cell membrane disintegration by QA groups. The increased local cationic QA charges in OPVE arms can also enhance the biocidal activity of PPO. Benefiting from these satisfactory features, PPO exhibits multiamplified antibacterial efficacy under a very low concentration level and white light dose (400-700 nm, 6 mW·cm, 5 min, 1.8 J·cm) to Escherichia coli (8 μM) and Staphylococcus aureus (500 nM). Therefore, PPO shows great potential for photodynamic antimicrobial chemotherapy at a much lower irradiation light dose and photosensitizer concentration level compared to previous reports.
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