Artículo de revista
Smart polyaniline nanoparticles with thermal and photothermal sensitivity
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Nanotechnology 25 (2014) 495602 (9pp)
doi:10.1088/0957-4484/25/49/495602
Autor
Bongiovanni Abel, Silvestre
Molina, María A.
Rivarola, Claudia R.
Kogan Bocian, Marcelo
Barbero, César A.
Institución
Resumen
Conductive polyaniline nanoparticles (PANI NPs) are synthesized by oxidation of aniline with
persulfate in acid media, in the presence of polymeric stabilizers: polyvinilpyrrolidone (PVP),
poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), and hydroxylpropylcellulose (HPC). It is observed that
the size of the nanoparticles obtained depends on the polymeric stabilizer used, suggesting a
mechanism where the aggregation of polyaniline molecules is arrested by adsorption of the
polymeric stabilizer. Indeed, polymerization in the presence of a mixture of two polymers having
different stabilizing capacity (PVP and PNIPAM) allows tuning of the size of the nanoparticles.
Stabilization with biocompatible PVP, HPC and PNIPAM allows use of the nanoparticle
dispersions in biological applications. The nanoparticles stabilized by thermosensitive polymers
(PNIPAM and HPC) aggregate when the temperature exceeds the phase transition (coil to
globule) temperature of each stabilizer (Tpt = 32 °C for PNIPAM or Tpt = 42 °C for HPC). This
result suggests that an extended coil form of the polymeric stabilizer is necessary to avoid
aggregation. The dispersions are reversibly restored when the temperature is lowered below Tpt.
In that way, the effect could be used to separate the nanoparticles from soluble contaminants. On
the other hand, the PANI NPs stabilized with PVP are unaffected by the temperature change.
UV-visible spectroscopy measurements show that the nanoparticle dispersion changes their
spectra with the pH of the external solution, suggesting that small molecules can easily penetrate
the stabilizer shell. Near infrared radiation is absorbed by PANI NPs causing an increase of their
temperature which induces the collapse of the thermosensitive polymer shell and aggregation of
the NPs. The effect reveals that it is possible to locally heat the nanoparticles, a phenomenon that
can be used to destroy tumor cells in cancer therapy or to dissolve protein aggregates of
neurodegenerative diseases (e.g. Alzheimer). Moreover, the long range control of aggregation
can be used to modulate the nanoparticle residence inside biological tissues.