The use of nanoparticles as a potential building block for photosensitizers has recently become a focus of interest in the field of photocatalysis and photodynamic therapy. Porphyrins and their derivatives are effective photosensitizers due to extended π-conjugated electronic structure, high molar absorption from visible to near-infrared spectrum, and high singlet oxygen quantum yields as well as chemical versatility. In this paper, we report a synthesis of self-assembled porphyrin nanoparticle photosensitizers using zinc meso-tetra(4-pyridyl)porphyrin (ZnTPyP) through a confined noncovalent self-assembly process. Scanning electron microscopy reveals formation of monodisperse cubic nanoparticles. UV-vis characterizations reveal that optical absorption of the nanoparticles exhibits a red shift due to noncovalent self-assembly of porphyrins, which not only effectively increase intensity of light absorption but also extend light absorption broadly covering visible light for enhanced photodynamic therapy. Electron spin-resonance spectroscopy (ESR) studies show the resultant porphyrin nanoparticles release a high yield of singlet oxygen. Nitric oxide (NO) coordinates to central metal Zn ions to form stabilized ZnTPyP@NO nanoparticles. We show that under light irradiation ZnTPyP@NO nanoparticles release highly reactive peroxynitrite molecules that exhibit enhanced antibacterial photodynamic therapy (APDT) activity. The ease of the synthesis of self-assembled porphyrin nanoparticles and light-triggered release of highly reactive moieties represent a completely different photosensitizer system for APDT application.
The design and engineering of the size, shape, and chemistry of photoactive building blocks enables the fabrication of functional nanoparticles for applications in light harvesting, photocatalytic synthesis, water splitting, phototherapy, and photodegradation. Here, we report the synthesis of such nanoparticles through a surfactant-assisted interfacial self-assembly process using optically active porphyrin as a functional building block. The self-assembly process relies on specific interactions such as π-π stacking and metalation (metal atoms and ligand coordination) between individual porphyrin building blocks. Depending on the kinetic conditions and type of surfactants, resulting structures exhibit well-defined one- to three-dimensional morphologies such as nanowires, nanooctahedra, and hierarchically ordered internal architectures. Specifically, electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction results indicate that these nanoparticles exhibit stable single-crystalline and nanoporous frameworks. Due to the hierarchical ordering of the porphyrins, the nanoparticles exhibit collective optical properties resulted from coupling of molecular porphyrins and photocatalytic activities such as photodegradation of methyl orange (MO) pollutants and hydrogen production.
We report the synthesis of hierarchical structured nanocrystals through an interfacial self-assembly driven microemulsion (μ-emulsion) process. An optically active macrocyclic building block Sn (IV) meso-tetraphenylporphine dichloride (tin porphyrin) is used to initiate noncovalent self-assembly confined within μ-emulsion droplets. In-situ studies of dynamic light scattering, UV-vis spectroscopy, and electron microscopy, as well as optical imaging of reaction processes suggest an evaporation-induced nucleation and growth self-assembly mechanism. The resulted nanocrystals exhibit uniform shapes and sizes from ten to a hundred nanometers. Because of the spatial ordering of tin porphyrin, the hierarchical nanocrystals exhibit collective optical properties resulting from the coupling of molecular tin porphyrin and photocatalytic activities in the reduction of platinum nanoparticles and networks and in photodegradation of methyl orange (MO) pollutants.
Abilities to control the size and shape of nanocrystals in order to tune functional properties are an important grand challenge. Here we report a surfactant self-assembly induced micelle encapsulation method to fabricate porphyrin nanocrystals using the optically active precursor zinc porphyrin (ZnTPP). Through confined noncovalent interactions of ZnTPP within surfactant micelles, nanocrystals with a series of morphologies including nanodisk, tetragonal rod, and hexagonal rod, as well as amorphous spherical particle are synthesized with controlled size and dimension. A phase diagram that describes morphology control is achieved via kinetically controlled nucleation and growth. Because of the spatial ordering of ZnTPP, the hierarchical nanocrystals exhibit both collective optical properties resulted from coupling of molecular ZnTPP and shape dependent photocatalytic activities in photo degradation of methyl orange pollutants. This simple ability to exert rational control over dimension and morphology provides new opportunities for practical applications in photocatalysis, sensing, and nanoelectronics.
Structurally controlled nanoparticles, such as core-shell nanocomposite particles by combining two or more compositions, possess enhanced or new functionalities that benefited from the synergistic coupling of the two components. Here we report new nanocomposite particles with self-assembled porphyrin arrays as the core surrounded by amorphous silica as the shell. The synthesis of such nanocomposite nanoparticles was conducted through a combined surfactant micelle confined self-assembly and silicate sol-gel process using optically active porphyrin as a functional building block. Depending on kinetic conditions, these particles exhibit structure and function at multiple length scales and locations. At the molecular scale, the porphyrins as the building blocks provide well-defined macromolecular structures for noncovalent self-assembly and unique chemistry for high-yield generation of singlet oxygen for photodynamic therapy (PDT). On the nanoscale, controlled noncovalent interactions of the porphyrin building block result in an extensive self-assembled porphyrin network that enables efficient energy transfer and impressive fluorescence for cell labeling, evidenced by absorption and photoluminescence spectra. Finally, the thin silicate shell on the nanoparticle surface allows easy functionalization, and the resultant targeting porphyrin-silica nanocomposites can selectively destroy tumor cells upon receiving light irradiation.
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