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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Nonordered Dendritic Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles As Promising Platforms For Advanced Methods Of Diagnosis And Therapies, S. Malekmohammadi, Riaz Ur Rehman Mohammed, H. Samadian, A. Zarebkohan, A. García-Fernández, G.R. Kokil, F. Sharifi, J. Esmaeili, M. Bhia, M. Razavi, M. Bodaghi, T. Kumeria, R. Martínez-Máñez Aug 2022

Nonordered Dendritic Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles As Promising Platforms For Advanced Methods Of Diagnosis And Therapies, S. Malekmohammadi, Riaz Ur Rehman Mohammed, H. Samadian, A. Zarebkohan, A. García-Fernández, G.R. Kokil, F. Sharifi, J. Esmaeili, M. Bhia, M. Razavi, M. Bodaghi, T. Kumeria, R. Martínez-Máñez

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering: Faculty Publications

Dendritic mesoporous silica nanoparticles (DMSNs) are a new generation of porous materials that have gained great attention compared to other mesoporous silicas due to attractive properties, including straightforward synthesis methods, modular surface chemistry, high surface area, tunable pore size, chemical inertness, particle size distribution, excellent biocompatibility, biodegradability, and high pore volume compared with conventional mesoporous materials. The last years have witnessed a blooming growth of the extensive utilization of DMSNs as an efficient platform in a broad spectrum of biomedical and industrial applications, such as catalysis, energy harvesting, biosensing, drug/gene delivery, imaging, theranostics, and tissue engineering. DMSNs are considered great …


Biomedical Applications Of Lanthanide Nanomaterials, For Imaging, Sensing And Therapy, Qize Zhang, Stephen O'Brien, Jan Grimm Jan 2022

Biomedical Applications Of Lanthanide Nanomaterials, For Imaging, Sensing And Therapy, Qize Zhang, Stephen O'Brien, Jan Grimm

Publications and Research

The application of nanomaterials made of rare earth elements within biomedical sciences continues to make significant progress. The rare earth elements, also called the lanthanides, play an essential role in modern life through materials and electronics. As we learn more about their utility, function, and underlying physics, we can contemplate extending their applications to biomedicine. This particularly applies to diagnosis and radiation therapy due to their relatively unique features, such as an ultra-wide Stokes shift in the luminescence, variable magnetism and potentially tunable properties, due to the library of lanthanides available and their multivalent oxidation state chemistry. The ability to …