Abstract

In the fight against bacterial infection, conventional antibiotic treatment encounters the formidable challenges of drug resistance and sluggish development. Non-metallic two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials such as black phosphorus (BP) have emerged as promising non-antibiotic antimicrobial candidates due to its peculiar physiochemical properties, but face hurdles including low ambient stability and limited antibacterial activity, hindering its widespread utilization in disinfection. Herein, few-layer BP nanosheets (BPNSs) were covalently passivated by edge-selectively grafting fullerene C70 via a one-step solid-state mechanochemical route, and for the first time the covalently functionalized BPNSs is employed in disinfection. Fullerene edge-selective covalent passivation not only effectively overcomes the obstacles of poor ambient stability, but also substantially enhances the antibacterial activities of BPNSs. The BPNSs-C70 hybrid (denoted as BPNSs-C70) was applied as a novel non-metallic and non-antibiotic nano-antibacterial agent. Under 660 nm visible light irradiation, BPNSs-C70 demonstrates high generation capacity of reactive oxygen species (ROS), resulting in boosted in vitro and in vivo antibacterial efficacies against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) relative to the pristine BPNSs with exceptional biocompatibility. The significantly enhanced antibacterial performance of BPNSs-C70 is attributed to the synergistically improved singlet oxygen (1O2) and hydroxyl radicals (•OH) generation originated from the intramolecular electron transfer from BPNSs to C70.

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