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Journal ArticleDOI

Construction of high strength hollow fibers by self-assembly of a stiff polysaccharide with short branches in water

TLDR
In this article, hollow fibers with high strength were constructed from a polysaccharide aqueous solution at a concentration of 0.02 g mL−1 using a hierarchical self-assembly process, and they exhibited excellent tensile strength, biocompatibility, organic solvent resistance and birefringence.
Abstract
The development of biological high-performance materials fabricated from natural polysaccharides has attracted great attention for a sustainable world. In this work, hollow fibers with high strength were spun from a polysaccharide aqueous solution at a concentration of 0.02 g mL−1. The polysaccharide was a comb-like β-glucan with short branches isolated from Auricularia auricula-judae, coded as AF1. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirmed directly that AF1 existed as a stiff chain conformation in water, and displayed parallel self-orientation behavior. AF1 could self-assemble into well defined hollow nanofibers with diameters less than 100 nm and lengths of tens of micrometers in dilute solution, supported by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Moreover, AF1 in the disulfonated tetraphenylethene (TPE-SO3Na) aqueous solution exhibited strong luminescence, indicating that the TPE-SO3Na molecules without luminescence in water were trapped in the cavities of the hollow nanofibers through hydrophobic interactions, leading to the aggregation-induced emission (AIE). The nanofibers were composed of relatively hydrophobic inner-walls and hydrophilic shells in water. Interestingly, SEM and polarized light microscopy verified that the nanofibers fused to form an ordered architecture of lamella and then tended to curl into hollow fibers in relatively concentrated solution. The hollow fibers exhibited excellent tensile strength, biocompatibility, organic solvent resistance and birefringence. A schematic model was proposed to describe the construction of the hollow fibers via the hierarchical self-assembly process. The new materials would have potential applications such as drug release as a new class of fibrous carrier, indicators with fluorescence to detect cell growth in cell transplantation, and biomolecular recognition (e.g., DNA).

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Feeding Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes or Graphene to Silkworms for Reinforced Silk Fibers

TL;DR: Mechanically enhanced silk directly collected by feeding Bombyx mori larval silkworms with single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) and graphene is reported and a highly developed graphitic structure with obviously enhanced electrical conductivity was obtained through the introduction of SWNTs and graphene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intermolecular interaction and the extended wormlike chain conformation of chitin in NaOH/urea aqueous solution.

TL;DR: The results revealed that the NaOH and chitin formed a hydrogen-bonded complex that was surrounded by the urea hydrates to form a sheath-like structure, leading to the good dissolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sugar-Based Aggregation-Induced Emission Luminogens: Design, Structures, and Applications

TL;DR: The promising future of the sugar-based AIE bioconjugates is suggested, considering that the naturally designed and elaborately functionalized saccharides play discriminate roles in biological processes and AIE-tagged species may work as an indicator in each case.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent Advances in Chain Conformation and Bioactivities of Triple-Helix Polysaccharides.

TL;DR: A deep understanding of β-glucans with triple-helix chain conformation is essential for the successful applications of the natural medicines and biologics for a sustainable world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Assembled Exopolysaccharide Nanoparticles for Bioremediation and Green Synthesis of Noble Metal Nanoparticles

TL;DR: It is reported for the first time that a novel non-glucan EPS named EPS-605 can self-assemble to form spherical nanosize particles of ∼88 nm in diameter, expanding both the range of EPS type and structural type that EPSs self- assemble into.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Aggregation-induced emission: phenomenon, mechanism and applications.

TL;DR: The restriction of intramolecular rotation is identified as a main cause for the AIE effect and a series of new fluorescent and phosphorescent AIE systems with emission colours covering the entire visible spectral region and luminescence quantum yields up to unity are developed.
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Enzymatic hydrolysis combined with mechanical shearing and high-pressure homogenization for nanoscale cellulose fibrils and strong gels.

TL;DR: Mild enzymatic hydrolysis has been introduced and combined with mechanical shearing and a high-pressure homogenization, leading to a controlled fibrillation down to nanoscale and a network of long and highly entangled cellulose I elements.
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Microfibrillated cellulose - its barrier properties and applications in cellulosic materials: a review.

TL;DR: It is proposed to focus on the barrier properties of MFC used in films, in nanocomposites, or in paper coating to reduce the high energy consumption and produce new types of M FC materials on an industrial scale.
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Template Synthesis of Nanostructured Materials via Layer-by-Layer Assembly†

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the two main classes of templates that have been employed to prepare nanostructured materials: planar and colloidal, and the use of porous planar or colloidal substrates in LbL synthesis is also presented, as this offers opportunit...
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Biocompatible Nanoparticles with Aggregation‐Induced Emission Characteristics as Far‐Red/Near‐Infrared Fluorescent Bioprobes for In Vitro and In Vivo Imaging Applications

TL;DR: The AIE‐active fluorogen‐loaded BSA NPs show an excellent cancer cell uptake and a prominent tumor‐targeting ability in vivo due to the enhanced permeability and retention effect.
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