A Janus three-dimensional DNA nanomachine was constructed for the simultaneous and sensitive fluorescent detection and imaging of dual microRNAs in the cancer cells.
Freestanding bipolar membranes (BPMs) with an extended-area
water
splitting junction were fabricated utilizing electrospinning. The
junction layer was composed of a mixed fiber mat that was made by
concurrently electrospinning sulfonated poly(ether ether ketone) (SPEEK)
and quaternized poly(phenylene oxide) (QPPO), with water splitting
catalyst nanoparticles intermittently deposited between the fibers.
The mat was sandwiched between solution cast SPEEK and QPPO films
and hot-pressed to form a dense trilayer BPM with an extended-area
junction of finite thickness, composed of QPPO nanofibers embedded
in a SPEEK matrix with the catalyst nanoparticles interspaced between
the two polymers. The composition, ion-exchange capacity, and catalyst
type/loading in the junction were varied, and the water splitting
characteristics of the membranes were assessed. The best BPMs fabricated
in this work employed a graphene oxide catalyst and exhibited a low
trans-membrane voltage drop of about 0.82 V at 1000 mA/cm2 in water splitting experiments with 0.5 M Na2SO4 and stable water splitting operation for 60 h at 800 mA/cm2.
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