Abstract

Upconversion nanosensitizers have been widely considered to have important applications in the treatment of major diseases such as tumors and the utilization of solar energy. Majority of the efforts so far have been focused on improving the efficiency of energy transfer (ET) between upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) and the anchored sensitizers with premise that high ET efficiency will lead to high acceptor efficacy. This premise is, however, proved by our current work to be invalid for commonly used load. Interaction between adjacent sensitizing molecules was found to be critical which undermines the amount of excited monomer sensitizers and thus fades the efficacy. Here NaYF4:Yb3+,Er3+ UCNPs and rose bengal (RB) photosensitizer molecules were used as the model energy donors and acceptors, respectively. Contrary to monotonous increase of the ET efficiency from UCNPs to RB species with increasing RB loading, acceptor efficacy characterized by the reactive oxygen species, as well as the RB fluorescence, exhibits bizarre dependence on the RB loading. The underlying mechanism was well studied by the steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy of a series of samples. RB aggregates are believed to be responsible for the severe deviation between the ET efficiency and acceptor efficacy. The conclusion was validated by in vitro test where the photodynamic therapy with the most monomer RB in UCNPs-RB nanosensitizers kills 35.8% more cells than that with the highest RB loading. This understanding sheds light on construction of new ET based nanosystems for broad applications, such as medicine, solar energy utilization and optical storage.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call