4.7 Article

Modulating the Surface Properties of Lithium Niobate Nanoparticles by Multifunctional Coatings Using Water-in-Oil Microemulsions

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13030522

Keywords

silanization; W; O microemulsion; surface functionalization; harmonic nanoparticles

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Inorganic nanoparticles can be surface-functionalized to enhance their biomedical applications. Silanization is a versatile coating strategy that allows the introduction of reactive moieties on the oxide surface of nanoparticles. In this study, silica coating of LiNbO3 nanoparticles was achieved through optimized microemulsion conditions, resulting in the formation of coated nanoparticles with carboxyl or azide reactive groups.
Inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) have emerged as promising tools in biomedical applications, owing to their inherent physicochemical properties and their ease of functionalization. In all potential applications, the surface functionalization strategy is a key step to ensure that NPs are able to overcome the barriers encountered in physiological media, while introducing specific reactive moieties to enable post-functionalization. Silanization appears as a versatile NP-coating strategy, due to the biocompatibility and stability of silica, thus justifying the need for robust and well controlled silanization protocols. Herein, we describe a procedure for the silica coating of harmonic metal oxide NPs (LiNbO3, LNO) using a water-in-oil microemulsion (W/O ME) approach. Through optimized ME conditions, the silanization of LNO NPs was achieved by the condensation of silica precursors (TEOS, APTES derivatives) on the oxide surface, resulting in the formation of coated NPs displaying carboxyl (LNO@COOH) or azide (LNO@N-3) reactive moieties. LNO@COOH NPs were further conjugated to an unnatural azido-containing small peptide to obtain silica-coated LNO NPs (LNO@Talys), displaying both azide and carboxyl moieties, which are well suited for biomedical applications due to the orthogonality of their surface functional groups, their colloidal stability in aqueous medium, and their anti-fouling properties.

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