Triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) has recently drawn widespread interest for its capacity to harvest low-energy photons and to broaden the absorption spectra of photonic devices, such as solar cells. Although conceptually promising, effective integration of TTA-UC materials into practical devices has been difficult due to the diffusive and anoxic conditions required in TTA-UC host media. Of the solid-state host materials investigated, rubbery polymers facilitate the highest TTA-UC efficiency. To date, however, their need for long-term oxygen protection has limited rubbery polymers to rigid film architectures that forfeit their intrinsic flexibility. This study introduces a new multilayer thin-film architecture, in which scalable solution processing techniques are employed to fabricate flexible, photostable, and efficient TTA-UC thin films containing layers of oxygen barrier and host polymers. This breakthrough material design marks a crucial advance toward TTA-UC integration within rigid and flexible devices alike. Moreover, it introduces new opportunities in unexplored applications such as anticounterfeiting. Soft lithography is incorporated into the film fabrication process to pattern TTA-UC host layers with a broad range of high-resolution microscale designs, and superimposing host layers with customized absorption, emission, and patterning ultimately produces proof-of-concept anticounterfeiting labels with advanced excitation-dependent photoluminescent security features.
Triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) has been attracting attention in various fields as a promising tool to efficiently generate shorter-wavelength photon than the incident light. Compared to conventional UC technologies (e.g.,...
Here, a novel, versatile synthetic strategy to fabricate a yolk–shell structured material that can encapsulate virtually any functional noble metal or metal oxide nanocatalysts of any morphology in a free suspension fashion is reported. This strategy also enables encapsulation of more than one type of nanoparticle inside a single shell, including paramagnetic iron oxide used for magnetic separation. The mesoporous organosilica shell provides efficient mass transfer of small target molecules, while serving as a size exclusion barrier for larger interfering molecules. Major structural and functional advantages of this material design are demonstrated by performing three proof‐of‐concept applications. First, effective encapsulation of plasmonic gold nanospheres for localized photothermal heating and heat‐driven reaction inside the shell is shown. Second, hydrogenation catalysis is demonstrated under spatial confinement driven by palladium nanocubes. Finally, the surface‐enhanced Raman spectroscopic detection of model pollutant by gold nanorods is presented for highly sensitive environmental sensing with size exclusion.
Epithelial ovarian cancer is a gynecological cancer with the highest mortality rate, and it exhibits resistance to conventional drugs. Gold nanospheres have gained increasing attention over the years as photothermal therapeutic nanoparticles, owing to their excellent biocompatibility, chemical stability, and ease of synthesis; however, their practical application has been hampered by their low colloidal stability and photothermal effects.In the present study, we developed a yolk−shell-structured silica nanocapsule encapsulating aggregated gold nanospheres (aAuYSs) and examined the photothermal effects of aAuYSs on cell death in drug-resistant ovarian cancers both in vitro and in vivo. The aAuYSs were synthesized using stepwise silica seed synthesis, surface amino functionalization, gold nanosphere decoration, mesoporous organosilica coating, and selective etching of the silica template. Gold nanospheres were agglomerated in the confined silica interior of aAuYSs, resulting in the red-shifting of absorbance and enhancement of the photothermal effect under 808 nm laser irradiation. The efficiency of photothermal therapy was first evaluated by inducing aAuYS-mediated cell death in A2780 ovarian cancer cells, which were cultured in a two-dimensional culture and a three-dimensional spheroid culture. We observed that photothermal therapy using aAuYSs together with doxorubicin treatment synergistically induced the cell death of doxorubicin-resistant A2780 cancer cells in vitro. Furthermore, this type of combinatorial treatment with photothermal therapy and doxorubicin synergistically inhibited the in vivo tumor growth of doxorubicin-resistant A2780 cancer cells in a xenograft transplantation model. These results suggest that photothermal therapy using aAuYSs is highly effective in the treatment of drug-resistant cancers.
This research reports the next generation of solid-state triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) host material (polycaprolactone, PCL) for highly efficient, processable, and biocompatible solid-state TTA-UC. UC PCL was successfully fabricated using...
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