Tissue Engineering And Nanotheranostics

(Steven Felgate) #1

“9.61x6.69” b2815 Tissue Engineering and Nanotheranostics


Magnetic Nanohybrids for Magnetic Resonance Imaging 121

Fig. 13. (a)–(d) Schematic mechanism of polystyrene/Fe 3 O 4 @SiO 2 magnetic Janus
nanohybrids (MJNHs), (e) TEM image of asymmetric Fe 3 O 4 /silica/polystyrene
nanocomposites particles, and (f) TEM images of MJNHs obtained without γ-Meth
acryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane molecules (scale bar is 500 nm and inset is 50 nm).
Reprinted with permission from Ref. 78.^


structure.^80 In the preparation method, they made hydrophobic iron


oxide nanoparticles about 10 nm in size and then asymmetric magnetic


composite particles were synthesized by mixing of the sol–gel reaction


with miniemulsion polymerization. Initially, a little fraction of styrene (St)


is changed into polystyrene chain and started to become heterogeneous


droplets at stage 3 by accumulating Fe 3 O 4 @TEOS on one side


and polystyrene on an opposite side. Finally, ammonia solution was added


to hydrolyze the TEOS to form SiO 2 shell as shown in TEM image


(Fig. 13(b)). Later, they repeated the same experiment without


γ-Methacryloxypropyltri-methoxysilane (MPS) and the result is shown in


Fig. 13(c). Therefore, MPS played an important character in the synthesis


of MNHs. Furthermore, these Janus hybrid particles showed superpara-


magnetic behavior due to their small sized iron oxide particles.

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