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Tingting Wu

Researcher at Hefei University of Technology

Publications -  5
Citations -  244

Tingting Wu is an academic researcher from Hefei University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanoprobe & Environmental pollution. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 80 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Portable Smartphone-Based QDs for the Visual Onsite Monitoring of Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics in Actual Food and Environmental Samples

TL;DR: This developed platform offers a great promise for point-of-care detection of FQs residues in practical application with merits of label-free, low-cost, and rapid, opening a new sight for on-site evaluating the food safety and environmental health.
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Engineering of a Dual-Recognition Ratiometric Fluorescent Nanosensor with a Remarkably Large Stokes Shift for Accurate Tracking of Pathogenic Bacteria at the Single-Cell Level.

TL;DR: A promising potential of integrating the concepts of remarkable large Stokes shift and dual-recognition into a single matrix for developing pathogenic microorganism stimuli-responsive ratiometric nanoprobe with speediness, cost-efficiency, stability, ultrahigh specificity and sensitivity is reported.
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Detection and Imaging of Hydrogen Sulfide in Lysosomes of Living Cells with Activatable Fluorescent Quantum Dots

TL;DR: This proposed nanoprobe revealed a more simple, rapid, time-saving, low-cost, sensitive, and selective process for monitoring of H2S in further environmental pollution, food safety, and clinical diagnosis of H 2S-related diseases.
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Size-Dependent Modulation of Polydopamine Nanospheres on Smart Nanoprobes for Detection of Pathogenic Bacteria at Single-Cell Level and Imaging-Guided Photothermal Bactericidal Activity

TL;DR: An all-in-one design strategy is reported as a proof-of-concept to establish a stimuli-responsive nanoprobe PDANSs-FAM-Apt for detection of Staphylococcus aureus at single-cell level, which could be capable of guiding the on-demand photothermal killing bacteria upon near-infrared (NIR) light irradiation.
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Nucleolin-Targeted Ratiometric Fluorescent Carbon Dots with a Remarkably Large Emission Wavelength Shift for Precise Imaging of Cathepsin B in Living Cancer Cells.

TL;DR: In this article, a ratiometric fluorescent method integrating a cancer-targeting recognition moiety with a remarkably large emission wavelength shift into a single matrix to report Cathepsin B (CTSB) activity sensitively and specifically was reported.