Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Pitt researchers harness carbon nanomaterials for drug delivery systems, oxygen sensors

Pitt researchers harness carbon nanomaterials for drug delivery systems, oxygen sensors

August 18, 2009

Researchers describe carbon nanocapsules for drug and energy storage in Advanced Materials, creation of highly sensitive oxygen sensors in Nature Chemistry

PITTSBURGH-Two nanoscale devices recently reported by University of Pittsburgh researchers in two separate journals harness the potential of carbon nanomaterials to enhance technologies for drug or imaging agent delivery and energy storage systems, in one case, and, in the other, bolster the sensitivity of oxygen sensors essential in confined settings, from mines to spacecrafts.




In a report published online by Advanced Materials Aug. 12, a team led by chemistry professors Alexander Star and Stéphane Petoud in Pitt's School of Arts and Sciences describe the creation of nanosized capsules that are universally compatible with a range of substances, particularly related to medicine and energy. When applied to medicine, the tiny vessels can potentially carry a sizable "cargo" of anticancer drugs or medical-imaging agents, and could be steered via antibodies and biological molecules to specific locations within the human body. Energy applications include the storage of lithium and hydrogen in batteries and fuel cells. Pitt graduate chemistry student Brett Allen was the paper's lead author. The project also included chemistry graduate student Chad Shade and Adrienne Yingling, now a graduate of Pitt's PhD chemistry program.

In a separate paper appearing online in Nature Chemistry Aug. 16, another team headed by Star and Petoud revealed the development of a highly sensitive, fluorescent oxygen sensor that can detect minute amounts of the gas. Oxygen detectors are important safety devices in mines, aircraft, submarines, and other confined spaces, the researchers note. The sensor consists of carbon nanotubes coated with a luminescent compound incorporating europium, a reactive metal found in fluorescent bulbs, television/computer screens, and lasers, among other applications.

The researchers gauged oxygen levels by measuring the intensity of its glow when exposed to ultraviolent light and the tubes' change in electrical conductance. The tubes demonstrated sensitivity to oxygen concentrations as low as 5 percent (normal atmospheric concentration is around 20 percent) with the team calculating that it can indicate a level as low as 0.4 percent, and they were unaffected by other atmospheric gases, such as carbon dioxide and nitrogen. The second paper was authored by Shade and Pitt chemistry graduate students Douglas Kauffman and Hyounsoo Uh.

For both technologies, the Pitt teams worked with carbon nanomaterials to create enhanced versions of existing technologies. For instance, the oxygen sensor combines the small scale of carbon nanotubes-they are one-atom thick rolls of graphite 100,000 times smaller than a human hair-with the reactivity of the europium compound coating to produce a platform for low-cost, room-temperature detectors that are notably sensitive to oxygen but less complicated than existing sensors, the researchers write in Nature Chemistry.

Regarding the nanocapsules described in Advanced Materials, existing technologies are typically constructed of polymers that are permeable like a sponge and can result in leakage, Star explained. Additionally, each capsule must be tailored to its particular cargo, he said. The Pitt version employs graphite carbon shells bonded with glutaraldehyde-a common biological adhesive-creating a hollow storage space. More importantly, the graphite shells are chemically inactive and are thus compatible with any cargo substance without costly and time-consuming chemical preparation, Star said.

"For decades, researchers have been searching for an optimal vessel for storing and transporting a variety of cargo to specified locations," Star said. "Our devices have the potential to be universal delivery vehicles for a range of materials. Our next steps will focus on controlling how and when the nanocapsules open by using different stimuli such as pH, light, and chemical agents."

To illustrate the capsules' adaptability, the team loaded them with a luminescent imaging agent developed in Petoud's lab made of zinc sulfide semiconductor nanocrystals incorporating terbium, a metal chemically similar to europium. Once in the body, the substance would emit a unique light that allows easier detection and a better image, Petoud said. But the inorganic nanocrystals have to be prepared before being introduced to a biological environment such as the body and is difficult and time-consuming. The graphite nanocapsules, however, could hold and transport the solution with no preparation.

University of Pittsburgh



Related Carbon Nanomaterials Current Events and Carbon Nanomaterials News Articles
Revealing new applications for carbon nanomaterials in hydrogen storage
An international research team, involving Professor Rajeev Ahuja at Uppsala University and researchers in the USA, set out to understand the mechanism behind the catalytic effects of carbon nanomaterials.
More Carbon Nanomaterials Current Events and Carbon Nanomaterials News Articles
Carbon Nanomaterials (Advanced Materials)

Carbon Nanomaterials (Advanced Materials)
by Yury Gogotsi (Editor)

First Self-Contained Source Entirely Dedicated to Nanocarbons

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) attract a good deal of attention for their electronic, mechanical, optical, and chemical characteristics. But nanostructured carbons are not limited to nanotubes and fullerenes—they also exist as nano-diamonds, fibers, cones, scrolls, whiskers, and graphite polyhedral crystals. While excellent papers and articles exist scattered across several journals, a comprehensive, single volume focused simply on carbon-based nanostructures was unavailable, until now.

Featuring the contributions of exceptional leaders in the field, Carbon Nanomaterials brings together the most up-to-date research findings on the special properties, practical synthesis, and real applications for all types of...

Magnetotransport in novel low-dimensional carbon nanomaterials

Magnetotransport in novel low-dimensional carbon nanomaterials
by Dirk Obergfell (Author)

Several novel low-dimensional carbon nanomaterials, scilicet graphene mono- and bilayers, single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) and SWNTs filled with Dy@C82 endohedral metallofullerenes (metallofullerene peapods), were investigated by electrical magnetotransport measurements at low temperatures in external magnetic fields of different orientations. The highlights of this study are that for both SWNTs and metallofullerene peapods, significant negative magnetoresistance (approx. 8 to 14 %) could be observed for axially oriented magnetic fields in some of the samples, where this effect vanished for the perpendicular magnetic field orientation. Other nanotubes did not show this effect at all. We assign the clearly different magnetotransport of the nanotubes in the parallel...

  Fullerenes 2000: Chemistry & Physics of Fullernes and Carbon Nanomaterials (Proceedings (Electrochemical Society), 2000-12.)
by D. M. Guldi (Author), Karl M. Kadish (Author), Prashant V. Kamat (Author), Ont.) Electrochemical Society Meeting 2000 (Toronto (Author), D. M. Guldi (Editor), Karl M. Kadish (Editor), Prashant V. Kamat (Editor), Electrochemical Society Fullerenes Group (Editor)



Desorption of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from carbon nanomaterials in water [An article from: Environmental Pollution]

Desorption of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from carbon nanomaterials in water [An article from: Environmental Pollution]
by K. Yang (Author), B. Xing (Author)

This digital document is a journal article from Environmental Pollution, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Desorption behavior of pyrene, phenanthrene and naphthalene from fullerene, single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) was examined. Available adsorption space of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) was found to be the cylindrical external surface, neither the inner cavities nor inter-wall spaces due to impurities in the CNTs and restricted spaces (0.335nm) of the MWCNTs, respectively. Desorption hysteresis was observed for fullerene but not for CNTs. Deformation-rearrangement was...

Hydrogen Materials Science and Chemistry of Carbon Nanomaterials (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series A: Chemistry and Biology)

Hydrogen Materials Science and Chemistry of Carbon Nanomaterials (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series A: Chemistry and Biology)
by T. Nejat Veziroglu (Editor), Svetlana Yu. Zaginaichenko (Editor), Dmitry V. Schur (Editor), Bogdan Baranowski (Editor), Anatoliy P. Shpak (Editor), Valeriy V. Skorokhod (Editor), Ayfer Kale (Editor)

The energy arteries of the corporate body of mankind are still fed mainly by fossil fuels; but they are in danger of running dry soon unless new energy sources are made available. One of the most important as well as the most ecologically pure power source is hydrogen, that constitutes the heart of hydrogen power engineering and is considered as a future alternative to fossil power sources. The chemistry of carbon nanomaterials and hydrogen materials science will play an important role in hastening the conversion to the Hydrogen Energy System. In this connection the research and application of materials capable of interacting actively with hydrogen, its accumulating and storing will be of the utmost significance. This is of particular actuality for creation of mobile energy sources both...

Carbon Nanomaterials in Clean Energy Hydrogen Systems (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security)

Carbon Nanomaterials in Clean Energy Hydrogen Systems (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security)
by Bogdan Baranowski (Editor), Svetlana Y. Zaginaichenko (Editor), Dmitry V. Schur (Editor), Valeriy V. Skorokhod (Editor), Ayfer Veziroglu (Editor)

The energy arteries of the corporate body of mankind are still fed mainly by fossil fuels; but they are in danger of running dry soon unless new energy sources are made available.

One of the most important as well as the most ecologically pure power source is hydrogen, that constitutes the heart of hydrogen power engineering and considered as a future alternative to fossil power sources.

The chemistry of carbon nanomaterials and hydrogen materials science will play an important role in hastening the conversion to the Hydrogen Energy System.

In this connection the research and application of materials capable of interacting actively with hydrogen, its accumulating and storing will be of the utmost significance. This is of particular actuality for creation of...

Hydrogen Materials Science and Chemistry of Carbon Nanomaterials: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Hydrogen Materials Science an Chemistry ... II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)

Hydrogen Materials Science and Chemistry of Carbon Nanomaterials: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Hydrogen Materials Science an Chemistry ... II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)
by T. Nejat Veziroglu (Editor), Svetlana Yu. Zaginaichenko (Editor), Dmitry V. Schur (Editor), B. Baranowski (Editor), Anatoliy P. Shpak (Editor), Valeriy V. Skorokhod (Editor)

The 2003 International Conference

  China takes a lead on carbon nanotubes. (Window On Nanomaterials In China).(Column): An article from: Nanoparticle News
by David Reisner (Author), James Hsiao (Author)

This digital document is an article from Nanoparticle News, published by Business Communications Company, Inc. on January 1, 2003. The length of the article is 694 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: China takes a lead on carbon nanotubes. (Window On Nanomaterials In China).(Column)
Author: David Reisner
Publication: Nanoparticle News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 1, 2003
Publisher: Business Communications Company, Inc.
Volume: 5 Issue: 12 Page: 13(1)

Article Type: Column

Distributed by Thomson...

  Carbon Nanomaterials
by Yury Gogotsi (Author)



  Carbon Nanomaterials in Sensor Technology
by Jerzy P. Lukaszewicz (Author)

This is a presentation of recent breakthroughs in CNT research devoted to sensing applications. Readers will find here practical information on how to exploit and manipulate the unique properties of CNTs and related materials for the construction of high-performance sensors, as well as successful methods for CNT synthesis. With its well-structured introduction to chemical sensing, which allows newcomers to become acquainted with the topic, this book shows beginners as well as experienced researchers what is really important for their daily work.

© 2009 BrightSurf.com