Abstract

Fabrication of antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) materials based on organic photosensitizers has garnered considerable attention within functional textiles. However, the UV- or narrow-band absorption range of the photosensitizers results in poor photon utilization of the fabrics, limiting the photodynamic efficiency and wasting solar energy. In this study, a broadband light-driven antibacterial cellulose fabric (CF-ZnPc/NAD) was developed by loading carboxyl-modified zinc(II) phthalocyanine photosensitizer (CAZnPc) and cationic 1,8-naphthalimide fluorescent molecule (NAD) on the fabric via covalent binding and electrostatic adsorption assembly, facilitating the intermolecular π-π coupling and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) process. There is a 2.54-fold increase in photo-induced ROS generation capacity of CF-ZnPc/NAD via the FRET process compared to that of CF-ZnPc, and it also exhibited a strong photothermal effect (PTT), wherein the temperature of the fabric increased from 24.5 to 53.5 °C within 80 s of illumination (λ > 400 nm, 75 mW/cm2). CF-ZnPc/NAD exhibited strong light-harvesting capacity and a combination of aPDT and PTT, achieving excellent antibacterial performance against Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive, S. aureus) and Escherichia coli (Gram-negative, E.coli) with 99.99 % bacterial reduction under 90 min of illumination (λ > 400 nm, 10 ± 1 mW/cm2). This study demonstrates a novel and facile strategy for successfully fabricating high-performance antibacterial cellulose fabrics with potential biomedical prospects.

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