Toolkit/polymer-encapsulated AIE fluorogen nanoparticles
polymer-encapsulated AIE fluorogen nanoparticles
Also known as: aggregation-induced emission fluorogen nanoparticles, AIE fluorogen nanoparticles, polymer encapsulated AIE fluorogen nanoparticles
Taxonomy: Mechanism Branch / Architecture. Workflows sit above the mechanism and technique branches rather than replacing them.
Summary
Of particular importance is the polymer encapsulated nanoparticles containing ... fluorogens with aggregation induced emission (AIE) characteristics as the core, which have shown significant advantages in terms of tunable brightness, superb photo- and physical stability, good biocompatibility, potential biodegradability and facile surface functionalization.
Usefulness & Problems
No literature-backed usefulness or problem-fit explainer has been materialized for this record yet.
Published Workflows
Objective: Engineer polymer-encapsulated organic nanoparticles for fluorescence and photoacoustic imaging by combining core-material choice, polymer-matrix selection, fabrication, and surface functionalization to tune imaging-relevant properties.
Why it works: The abstract states that nanoparticle properties can be fine-tuned through precise engineering of the organic cores and careful selection of polymer matrices, implying a design workflow that couples material choice to final imaging performance.
Stages
- 1.material design and matrix selection(library_design)
The abstract explicitly states that precise engineering of organic cores and careful selection of polymer matrices are used to fine-tune nanoparticle properties.
Selection: Choose organic core type and polymer matrix to tune nanoparticle properties such as size and fluorescence quantum yield.
- 2.nanoparticle fabrication(library_build)
The abstract explicitly includes nanoparticle fabrication as a major reviewed topic.
Selection: Build polymer-encapsulated nanoparticles from the chosen core materials and matrices.
- 3.surface functionalization(secondary_characterization)
The abstract explicitly includes surface functionalization and mentions targeted in vitro and in vivo imaging applications.
Selection: Add or optimize surface features for targeted or application-specific imaging use.
- 4.application imaging evaluation(functional_characterization)
The abstract lists multiple imaging applications discussed in the review, indicating downstream functional evaluation of the engineered nanoparticles.
Selection: Assess use in fluorescence and photoacoustic imaging applications such as cell labeling, targeted imaging, blood vessel imaging, cell tracing, inflammation monitoring, and molecular imaging.
Taxonomy & Function
Primary hierarchy
Mechanism Branch
Architecture: A delivery strategy grouped with the mechanism branch because it determines how a system is instantiated and deployed in context.
Mechanisms
aggregation-induced emissionfluorescence imagingphotoacoustic imagingpolymer encapsulationTechniques
Selection / EnrichmentTarget processes
selectionInput: Light
Validation
Supporting Sources
Ranked Claims
Polymer-encapsulated nanoparticles with conjugated polymer or AIE fluorogen cores have significant advantages including tunable brightness, strong photo- and physical stability, good biocompatibility, potential biodegradability, and facile surface functionalization.
The reviewed nanoparticle classes are applied to cell labeling, targeted in vitro and in vivo imaging, blood vessel imaging, cell tracing, inflammation monitoring, and molecular imaging.
Nanoparticle properties such as size and fluorescence quantum yield can be fine-tuned through precise engineering of the organic cores and careful selection of polymer matrices.
The review highlights both merits and limitations of polymer-encapsulated organic nanoparticles and discusses strategies used to overcome the limitations.
Polymer-encapsulated organic nanoparticles are attracting increasing biomedical interest because of unique optical properties, easy fabrication, and strong performance as imaging and therapeutic agents.
Approval Evidence
Of particular importance is the polymer encapsulated nanoparticles containing ... fluorogens with aggregation induced emission (AIE) characteristics as the core, which have shown significant advantages in terms of tunable brightness, superb photo- and physical stability, good biocompatibility, potential biodegradability and facile surface functionalization.
Source:
Polymer-encapsulated nanoparticles with conjugated polymer or AIE fluorogen cores have significant advantages including tunable brightness, strong photo- and physical stability, good biocompatibility, potential biodegradability, and facile surface functionalization.
Source:
The reviewed nanoparticle classes are applied to cell labeling, targeted in vitro and in vivo imaging, blood vessel imaging, cell tracing, inflammation monitoring, and molecular imaging.
Source:
Nanoparticle properties such as size and fluorescence quantum yield can be fine-tuned through precise engineering of the organic cores and careful selection of polymer matrices.
Source:
Comparisons
No literature-backed comparison notes have been materialized for this record yet.
Ranked Citations
- 1.