Journal
MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 1253-1260Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2qm00106c
Keywords
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Funding
- National Science Foundation [1932963]
- Defense Threat Reduction Agency [HDTRA1-19-0021]
- Department of Energy, OBER, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory SFA [DE-AC52-07NA27344, LLNL-JRNL-827946]
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Catechol-based materials in redox-based bioelectronics possess diverse properties and can transduce near infrared (NIR) radiation into heat. The study shows that catechol-chitosan films can reversibly respond to both NIR and redox inputs, suggesting the independent flow of energy through catechol-based materials via redox and electromagnetic modalities. These findings highlight the potential of catecholic materials for bio-device communication, offering both short-range redox communication and long-range electromagnetic communication.
Catechol-based materials possess diverse properties that are especially well-suitable for redox-based bioelectronics. Previous top-down, systems-level property measurements have shown that catechol-polysaccharide films (e.g., catechol-chitosan films) are redox-active and allow electrons to flow through the catechol/quinone moieties via thermodynamically-constrained redox reactions. Here, we report that catechol-chitosan films are also photothermally responsive and enable near infrared (NIR) radiation to be transduced into heat. When we simultaneously stimulated catechol-chitosan films with NIR and redox inputs, times-series measurements showed that the responses were reversible and largely independent. Fundamentally, these top-down measurements suggest that the flow of energy through catechol-based materials via the redox-based molecular modality and the electromagnetic-based optical modality can be independent. Practically, this work further illustrates the potential of catecholic materials for bridging bio-device communication because it enables communication through both short-range redox modalities and long-range electromagnetic modalities.
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