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Department of Physics and Chemistry
SMALL LAB(Single Molecule Approaches to ceLL Lab)
1. Journal Articles
Sunlight-Activatable ROS Generator for Cell Death Using TiO2/ c-Si Microwires
Lee, Kangmin
;
Shin, Sangwon
;
Lee, Wonhee
;
Choi, Deokjae
;
Ahn, Yongdeok
;
Park, Minsoo
;
Seo, Daeha
;
Seo, Kwanyong
Department of Physics and Chemistry
SMALL LAB(Single Molecule Approaches to ceLL Lab)
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Sunlight-Activatable ROS Generator for Cell Death Using TiO2/ c-Si Microwires
Issued Date
2021-08
Citation
Lee, Kangmin. (2021-08). Sunlight-Activatable ROS Generator for Cell Death Using TiO2/ c-Si Microwires. Nano Letters, 21(16), 6998–7004. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02337
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Cell death
;
Photocatalytic disinfection
;
Reactive oxygen species
;
TiO2/ c-Si microwires
Keywords
Cell death
;
Hydrogen peroxide
;
Irradiation
;
Logistic regression
;
Oxide minerals
;
Anatase titanium dioxide
;
Bactericidal effects
;
Crystalline silicons
;
Diffusion length
;
Dominant species
;
Light irradiations
;
Water environments
;
Water purification
;
Titanium dioxide
ISSN
1530-6984
Abstract
Solar-driven reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation is an attractive disinfection technique for cell death and water purification. However, most photocatalysts require high stability in the water environment and the production of ROS with a sufficient amount and diffusion length to damage pathogens. Here, a ROS generation system was developed consisting of tapered crystalline silicon microwires coated with anatase titanium dioxide for a conformal junction. The system effectively absorbed >95% of sunlight over 300-1100 nm, resulting in effective ROS generation. The system was designed to produce various ROS species, but a logistic regression analysis with cellular survival data revealed that the diffusion length of the ROS is ∼9 μm, implying that the most dominant species causing cell damage is H2O2. Surprisingly, a quantitative analysis showed that only 15 min of light irradiation on the system would catalyze a local bactericidal effect comparable to the conventional germicidal level of H2O2 (∼3 mM). © 2021 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/15342
DOI
10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02337
Publisher
American Chemical Society
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