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All Organic Bulk Heterojunction Antibacterial Nanoparticles Prepared by Conjugated Donor Polymer and ITIC Acceptor
Author(s) -
Wang Jiaxuan,
Wang Danni,
Lv Jing,
Li Feng,
Zhuang Tao,
Saparbaev Aziz,
Makhmanov Urol Kudratovich,
Sun Mingliang
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
macromolecular chemistry and physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.57
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1521-3935
pISSN - 1022-1352
DOI - 10.1002/macp.202400504
Subject(s) - conjugated system , polymer chemistry , polymer , acceptor , nanoparticle , chemistry , materials science , photochemistry , organic chemistry , nanotechnology , physics , condensed matter physics
Abstract PFO‐DDQ is a donor−acceptor (D–A) type conjugated polymer, with its backbone consisting of 95% 9,9‐di‐octylfluorene (DOF) and 5% 2,3‐dimethyl‐5,8‐dithien‐2‐yl‐quinoxalines (DDQ). PFO‐DDQ nanoparticles (NPs) suspensions are prepared using the nanoprecipitation method by varying the precursor solution concentration. The photoluminescence (PL) spectrum of the nanoparticles is determined by the energy transfer between the fluorene and the narrow‐bandgap DDQ segments. The fluorescence of the NPs can be tuned from orange to blue by adjusting the concentration of the precursor solution. PFO‐DDQ, the nonfullerene acceptor small molecule (ITIC), and PFO‐DDQ/ITIC bulk heterojunction (BHJ) NPs suspensions are prepared using the nanoprecipitation method, and their photocatalytic antibacterial properties are evaluated. The results showed that, under 2 h of exposure to a 35 mW cm − 2 LED light, the antimicrobial rates of the three 40 µg mL −1 nanoparticles suspensions against Escherichia coli ( E . coli ) are 98.28%, 100%, and 99.88%, respectively. The enhanced light absorption, improved charge transfer efficiency, and the crystalline phase of ITIC contributed to the faster photocatalytic antibacterial rate of PFO‐DDQ/ITIC BHJ nanoparticles.

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