Planar and Twisted Molecular Structure Leads to the High Brightness of Semiconducting Polymer Nanoparticles for NIR-IIa Fluorescence Imaging — Shunjie Liu (2020) | RDL Network
Planar and Twisted Molecular Structure Leads to the High Brightness of Semiconducting Polymer Nanoparticles for NIR-IIa Fluorescence Imaging
Article 2020 en
Authors
SL
Shunjie Liu
HO
Hanlin Ou
YL
Yuanyuan Li
Abstract
1 min read
Semiconducting polymer nanoparticles (SPNs) emitting in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) are promising materials for deep-tissue optical imaging in mammals, but the brightness is far from satisfactory. Herein, we developed a molecular design strategy to boost the brightness of NIR-II SPNs: structure planarization and twisting. By integration of the strong absorption coefficient inherited from planar π-conjugated units and high solid-state quantum yield (Φ<sub>PL</sub>) from twisted motifs into one polymer, a rise in brightness was obtained. The resulting pNIR-4 with both twisted and planar structure displayed improved Φ<sub>PL</sub> and absorption when compared to the planar polymer pNIR-1 and the twisted polymer pNIR-2. Given the emission tail extending into the NIR-IIa region (1300-1400 nm) of the pNIR-4 nanoparticles, NIR-IIa fluorescence imaging of blood vessels with enhanced clarity was observed. Moreover, a pH-responsive poly(β-amino ester) made pNIR-4 specifically accumulate at tumor sites, allowing NIR-IIa fluorescence image-guided cancer precision resection. This study provides a molecular design strategy for developing highly bright fluorophores.
Shunjie Liu, Runze Chen, Jianquan Zhang, Yuanyuan Li, Mubin He, Xiaoxiao Fan, Haoke Zhang, Xuefeng Lu, Ryan T. K. Kwok, Hui Lin, Jacky W. Y. Lam, Jun Qian, Ben Zhong Tang
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