Abstract

The aim of this study is to develop self-standing, ultrathin film, nanosheets with high magnetic response for use in a medical device that can be migrated to a target location in the body by using an external magnetic field. First, iron oxide nanoparticles are synthesized by either the sol-gel method or thermal decomposition. The resulting magnetic properties of the nanoparticles show that the thermal decomposition method provides a greater saturation magnetization value than the sol-gel method. Next, the nanoparticles obtained by the thermal decomposition method are embedded into nanosheets of poly(L-lactide) at varying concentrations. Embedding of the nanoparticles in the composite nanosheets is achieved by the application of an external magnetic field. The composite nanosheets are then characterized. The thickness of the nanosheet increases, and the nanoparticles are well dispersed, with an increase in poly (L-lactide) concentration. The NP-embedded nanosheets are imaged by transmission electron microscopy, which reveals thin, long aggregates aligned in collinear line features. X-ray diffraction results indicate that the magnetic hard axis of the nanoparticles in the nanosheets is aligned in parallel to the plane of the nanosheet by magnetic field application during nanosheet preparation. In addition, the nanosheets at high poly (L-lactide) concentrations that had been subjected to a magnetic field during preparation show a slightly greater magnetic response compared with both nanosheets without magnetic field exposure and nanosheets prepared at low poly (L-lactide) concentrations.

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