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900034

Sigma-Aldrich

Iron oxide (II,III), nanopowder

25 nm, NHS ester functionalized

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
12352303
NACRES:
NA.23

form

nanopowder
powder

Quality Level

particle size

25 nm

functional group

NHS ester

storage temp.

−20°C

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Application

Iron oxide nanoparticles exhibit biocompatibility and non-toxicity and are used as magnetic resonance imaging contrast agent, gene carrier for gene therapy, therapeutic agent for hyperthermia-cased cancer treatment, magnetic sensing probe for in-vivo diagnostics and target specific drug delivery.

wgk_germany

WGK 2


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Xianglong Hu et al.
Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003), 44(9), 3904-3922 (2015-01-13)
Responsive polymeric assemblies and hybrid superstructures fabricated from stimuli-sensitive polymers and inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) have been the subject of extensive investigations during the past few decades due to their distinct advantages such as an improved water solubility, stimuli-responsiveness, excellent biocompatibility
Jin Xie et al.
Theranostics, 2, 122-124 (2012-01-31)
This theme issue provides a timely collection of studies on magnetic nanoparticle-based imaging, bio-sensing, therapy and/or their combinations.
Joan Estelrich et al.
International journal of molecular sciences, 16(4), 8070-8101 (2015-04-14)
In this review, we discuss the recent advances in and problems with the use of magnetically-guided and magnetically-responsive nanoparticles in drug delivery and magnetofection. In magnetically-guided nanoparticles, a constant external magnetic field is used to transport magnetic nanoparticles loaded with

Articles

Professor Yu Cheng and co-workers look at the recent advances of nanoparticle-based imaging contrast agents for in vivo stem cell tracking. They provide an in-depth look at popular in vivo imaging techniques, magnetic resonance imaging, fluorescence imaging, ultrasound imaging, and photoacoustic imaging.

Professor Hui Mao explores the use of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (INOPs) that offer an alternate contrast-enhancing mechanism.

Professor Yadong Yin (University of California Riverside, USA) examines both direct (thermal decomposition, solvothermal, hydrothermal) and indirect (templated) synthesis methods of magnetite nanocrystals and reviews in detail the landscape of these various synthetic methods for magnetite nanocrystal and their applications in magnetic assembly, magnetic hyperthermia, and Li-Ion batteries.

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