Affiliation:
1. The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University Qingdao University Qingdao 266071 China
2. CAS Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Corrosion and Bio‐Fouling Institute of Oceanology China Academy of Sciences Qingdao 266071 China
3. Department of Breast Surgery Qingdao Central Hospital University of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences Qingdao 266042 China
Abstract
AbstractFlexibility of nanomaterials is challenging but worthy to tune for biomedical applications. Biocompatible silica nanomaterials are under extensive exploration but are rarely observed to exhibit flexibility despite the polymeric nature. Herein, a facile one‐step route is reported to ultrathin flexible silica nanosheets (NSs), whose low thickness and high diameter‐to‐thickness ratio enables folding. Thickness and diameter can be readily tuned to enable controlled flexibility. Mechanism study reveals that beyond the commonly used surfactant, the “uncommon” one bearing two hydrophobic tails play a guiding role in producing sheeted/layered/shelled structures, while addition of ethanol appropriately relieved the strong interfacial tension of the assembled surfactants, which will otherwise produce large curled sheeted structures. With these ultrathin NSs, it is further shown that the cellular preference for particle shape and rigidity is highly dependent on surface chemistry of nanoparticles: under high particle‐cell affinity, NSs, and especially the flexible ones will be preferred by mammalian cells for internalization or attachment, while this preference is basically invalid when the affinity is low. Therefore, properties of the ultrathin silica NSs can be effectively expanded and empowered by surface chemistry to realize improved bio‐sensing or drug delivery.
Funder
Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
National Natural Science Foundation of China