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Selective captivation of DOX via topotactic surface enrichment with hydrated sodium ions on engineered MXene nanosheets

Authors
Khalid, ZubairXie, JingHadi, FarhanYamaguchi, TetsuoSalles, FabriceOh, Jae-Min
Issue Date
Jan-2025
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Keywords
Covalent Bonds; Crystal Impurities; Etching; Metal Ions; Nanosheets; X Ray Powder Diffraction; Aqueous System; Cation Exchanges; Covalent Bond Formation; Doxorubicin; Functionalized; Parent Phase; Sodium Ions; Surface Enrichment; Transition Metals Carbides; Two-dimensional; X Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.13, no.5, pp 3461 - 3473
Pages
13
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
13
Number
5
Start Page
3461
End Page
3473
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/56627
DOI
10.1039/d4ta06297c
ISSN
2050-7488
2050-7496
Abstract
Effective adsorption of the doxorubicin drug from an aqueous system was achieved by utilizing a surface-functionalized, two-dimensional transition metal carbide (MXene). Synthesis of the impurity-free parent phase, followed by subsequent etching and alkalization produced the surface-functionalized MXene (Na+-MXene). The powder X-ray diffraction patterns and electron microscopy analysis results suggested that the Na+ ion was successfully intercalated into the two-dimensional MXene with high crystallinity. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results indicated that an O-rich surface was achieved in the Na+-MXene compared with the conventional MXene, suggesting an enhanced drug adsorption through the O-rich groups. According to the kinetics and isotherm studies, doxorubicin molecules were found to adsorb on Na+-MXene through the pseudo-second-order kinetics, forming a single layer with a maximum adsorption of similar to 250 mg g-1. The X-ray photoelectron spectrum after drug adsorption suggested that doxorubicin was either adsorbed by cation exchange- or nucleophilic addition-driven covalent bond formation. Monte Carlo simulation and comparative adsorption studies revealed that the strong affinity of doxorubicin toward Na+-MXene was mainly mediated by the interaction between the primary amino group and the MXene layer, resulting in both cation exchange and covalent bond formation.
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