Polyphenol‐Containing Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Properties, and Therapeutic DeliveryYuxin Guo, Qing Sun, Fu‐Gen Wu et al.|Advanced Materials|2021 Polyphenols, the phenolic hydroxyl group-containing organic molecules, are widely found in natural plants and have shown beneficial effects on human health. Recently, polyphenol-containing nanoparticles have attracted extensive research attention due to their antioxidation property, anticancer activity, and universal adherent affinity, and thus have shown great promise in the preparation, stabilization, and modification of multifunctional nanoassemblies for bioimaging, therapeutic delivery, and other biomedical applications. Additionally, the metal-polyphenol networks, formed by the coordination interactions between polyphenols and metal ions, have been used to prepare an important class of polyphenol-containing nanoparticles for surface modification, bioimaging, drug delivery, and disease treatments. By focusing on the interactions between polyphenols and different materials (e.g., metal ions, inorganic materials, polymers, proteins, and nucleic acids), a comprehensive review on the synthesis and properties of the polyphenol-containing nanoparticles is provided. Moreover, the remarkable versatility of polyphenol-containing nanoparticles in different biomedical applications, including biodetection, multimodal bioimaging, protein and gene delivery, bone repair, antibiosis, and cancer theranostics is also demonstrated. Finally, the challenges faced by future research regarding the polyphenol-containing nanoparticles are discussed.
A general approach to high-efficiency perovskite solar cells by any antisolventDeposition of perovskite films by antisolvent engineering is a highly common method employed in perovskite photovoltaics research. Herein, we report on a general method that allows for the fabrication of highly efficient perovskite solar cells by any antisolvent via manipulation of the antisolvent application rate. Through detailed structural, compositional, and microstructural characterization of perovskite layers fabricated by 14 different antisolvents, we identify two key factors that influence the quality of the perovskite layer: the solubility of the organic precursors in the antisolvent and its miscibility with the host solvent(s) of the perovskite precursor solution, which combine to produce rate-dependent behavior during the antisolvent application step. Leveraging this, we produce devices with power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) that exceed 21% using a wide range of antisolvents. Moreover, we demonstrate that employing the optimal antisolvent application procedure allows for highly efficient solar cells to be fabricated from a broad range of precursor stoichiometries.
A Glucose/Oxygen‐Exhausting Nanoreactor for Starvation‐ and Hypoxia‐Activated Sustainable and Cascade Chemo‐Chemodynamic TherapyAbstract Fenton reaction‐mediated chemodynamic therapy (CDT) can kill cancer cells via the conversion of H 2 O 2 to highly toxic HO•. However, problems such as insufficient H 2 O 2 levels in the tumor tissue and low Fenton reaction efficiency severely limit the performance of CDT. Here, the prodrug tirapazamine (TPZ)‐loaded human serum albumin (HSA)–glucose oxidase (GOx) mixture is prepared and modified with a metal–polyphenol network composed of ferric ions (Fe 3+ ) and tannic acid (TA), to obtain a self‐amplified nanoreactor termed HSA–GOx–TPZ–Fe 3+ –TA (HGTFT) for sustainable and cascade cancer therapy with exogenous H 2 O 2 production and TA‐accelerated Fe 3+ /Fe 2+ conversion. The HGTFT nanoreactor can efficiently convert oxygen into HO• for CDT, consume glucose for starvation therapy, and provide a hypoxic environment for TPZ radical‐mediated chemotherapy. Besides, it is revealed that the nanoreactor can significantly elevate the intracellular reactive oxygen species content and hypoxia level, decrease the intracellular glutathione content, and release metal ions in the tumors for metal ion interference therapy (also termed “ion‐interference therapy” or “metal ion therapy”). Further, the nanoreactor can also increase the tumor’s hypoxia level and efficiently inhibit tumor growth. It is believed that this tumor microenvironment‐regulable nanoreactor with sustainable and cascade anticancer performance and excellent biosafety represents an advance in nanomedicine.
Role of Microstructure in Oxygen Induced Photodegradation of Methylammonium Lead Triiodide Perovskite FilmsQing Sun, Paul Faßl, David Becker‐Koch et al.|Advanced Energy Materials|2017 Abstract This paper investigates the impact of microstructure on the degradation rate of methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPbI 3 ) perovskite films upon exposure to light and oxygen. By comparing the oxygen induced degradation of perovskite films of different microstructure–fabricated using either a lead acetate trihydrate precursor or a solvent engineering technique–it is demonstrated that films with larger and more uniform grains and better electronic quality show a significantly reduced degradation compared to films with smaller, more irregular grains. The effect of degradation on the optical, compositional, and microstructural properties of the perovskite layers is characterized and it is demonstrated that oxygen induced degradation is initiated at the layer surface and grain boundaries. It is found that under illumination, irreversible degradation can occur at oxygen levels as low as 1%, suggesting that degradation can commence already during the device fabrication stage. Finally, this work establishes that improved thin‐film microstructure, with large uniform grains and a low density of defects, is a prerequisite for enhanced stability necessary in order to make MAPbI 3 a promising long lived and low cost alternative for future photovoltaic applications.
Inkjet‐Printed Micrometer‐Thick Perovskite Solar Cells with Large Columnar GrainsAbstract Transferring the high power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of spin‐coated perovskite solar cells (PSCs) on the laboratory scale to large‐area photovoltaic modules requires a significant advance in scalable fabrication methods. Digital inkjet printing promises scalable, material, and cost‐efficient deposition of perovskite thin films on a wide range of substrates and in arbitrary shapes. In this work, high‐quality inkjet‐printed triple‐cation (methylammonium, formamidinium, and cesium) perovskite layers with exceptional thicknesses of >1 µm are demonstrated, enabling unprecedentedly high PCEs > 21% and stabilized power output efficiencies > 18% for inkjet‐printed PSCs. In‐depth characterization shows that the thick inkjet‐printed perovskite thin films deposited using the process developed herein exhibit a columnar crystal structure, free of horizontal grain boundaries, which extend over the entire thickness. A thin film thickness of around 1.5 µm is determined as optimal for PSC for this process. Up to this layer thickness X‐ray photoemission spectroscopy analysis confirms the expected stoichiometric perovskite composition at the surface and shows strong deviations and inhomogeneities for thicker thin films. The micrometer‐thick perovskite thin films exhibit remarkably long charge carrier lifetimes, highlighting their excellent optoelectronic characteristics. They are particularly promising for next‐generation inkjet‐printed perovskite solar cells, photodetectors, and X‐ray detectors.