Litcius/Paper detail

Unravelling an amine-regulated crystallization crossover to prove single/multicore effects on the biomedical and environmental catalytic activity of magnetic iron oxide colloids

Álvaro Gallo‐Córdova, Jesús G. Ovejero, Ana-María Pablo-Sainz-Ezquerra, Jhon Cuya, Balachandran Jeyadevan, S. Veintemillas‐Verdaguer, Pedro Tartaj, M. P. Morales

2021Journal of Colloid and Interface Science28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Elucidation of reaction mechanisms in forming nanostructures is relevant to obtain robust and affordable protocols that can lead to materials with enhanced properties and good reproducibility. Here, the formation of magnetic iron oxide monocrystalline nanoflowers in polyol solvents using N-methyldiethanolamine (NMDEA) as co-solvent has been shown to occur through a non-classical crystallization pathway. This pathway involves intermediate mesocrystals that, in addition, can be transformed into large single colloidal nanocrystals. Interestingly, the crossover of a non-classical crystallization pathway to a classical crystallization pathway can be induced by merely changing the NMDEA concentration. The key is the stability of a green rust-like intermediate complex that modulates the nucleation rate and growth of magnetite nanocrystals. The crossover separates two crystallization domains (classical and non-classical) and three basic configurations (mesocrystals, large and small colloidal nanocrystals). The above finding facilitated the synthesis of magnetic materials with different configurations to suit various engineering applications. Consequently, the effect of the single and multicore configurations of magnetic iron oxide on the biomedical (magnetic hyperthermia and enzyme immobilization) and catalytic activity (Fenton-like reactions and photo-Fenton-like processes driven by visible light irradiation) has been experimentally demonstrated.

Topics & Concepts

CrystallizationMagnetiteNucleationNanocrystalChemical engineeringIron oxideColloidMaterials scienceOxideCatalysisIron oxide nanoparticlesNanotechnologyChemistryNanoparticleOrganic chemistryEngineeringMetallurgyIron oxide chemistry and applicationsNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryNanomaterials for catalytic reactions