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Soares, P. I. P., D. Machado, C. Laia, L. C. J. Pereira, J. T. Coutinho, I. M. M. Ferreira, C. M. M. Novo, and J. P. Borges, "Thermal and magnetic properties of chitosan-iron oxide nanoparticles", Carbohydr Polym, vol. 149, pp. 382-390, 2016. AbstractDOI

Chitosan is a biopolymer widely used for biomedical applications such as drug delivery systems, wound healing, and tissue engineering. Chitosan can be used as coating for other types of materials such as iron oxide nanoparticles, improving its biocompatibility while extending its range of applications.

In this work iron oxide nanoparticles (Fe3O4 NPs) produced by chemical precipitation and thermal decomposition and coated with chitosan with different molecular weights were studied. Basic characterization on bare and chitosan-Fe3O4 NPs was performed demonstrating that chitosan does not affect the crystallinity, chemical composition, and superparamagnetic properties of the Fe3O4 NPs, and also the incorporation of Fe3O4 NPs into chitosan nanoparticles increases the later hydrodynamic diameter without compromising its physical and chemical properties. The nano-composite was tested for magnetic hyperthermia by applying an alternating current magnetic field to the samples demonstrating that the heating ability of the Fe3O4 NPs was not significantly affected by chitosan.

Soares, P. I. P., F. Lochte, C. Echeverria, L. C. J. Pereira, J. T. Coutinho, I. M. M. Ferreira, C. M. M. Novo, and J. P. M. R. Borges, "Thermal and magnetic properties of iron oxide colloids: influence of surfactants", Nanotechnology, vol. 26, issue 42, pp. 425704, 2015. AbstractDOI

Iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) have been extensively studied in the last few decades for several biomedical applications such as magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic drug delivery and hyperthermia. Hyperthermia is a technique used for cancer treatment which consists in inducing a temperature of about 41–45 °C in cancerous cells through magnetic NPs and an external magnetic field. Chemical precipitation was used to produce iron oxide NPs 9 nm in size coated with oleic acid and trisodium citrate. The influence of both stabilizers on the heating ability and in vitro cytotoxicity of the produced iron oxide NPs was assessed. Physicochemical characterization of the samples confirmed that the used surfactants do not change the particles' average size and that the presence of the surfactants has a strong effect on both the magnetic properties and the heating ability. The heating ability of Fe3O4 NPs shows a proportional increase with the increase of iron concentration, although when coated with trisodium citrate or oleic acid the heating ability decreases. Cytotoxicity assays demonstrated that both pristine and trisodium citrate Fe3O4 samples do not reduce cell viability. However, oleic acid Fe3O4 strongly reduces cell viability, more drastically in the SaOs-2 cell line. The produced iron oxide NPs are suitable for cancer hyperthermia treatment and the use of a surfactant brings great advantages concerning the dispersion of NPs, also allowing better control of the hyperthermia temperature.

Soares, P. I. P., A. I. Sousa, I. M. M. Ferreira, C. M. M. Novo, and J. P. Borges, "Towards the development of multifunctional chitosan-based iron oxide nanoparticles: Optimization and modelling of doxorubicin release", Carbohydr Polym, vol. 153, pp. 212-221, 2016. AbstractDOI

In the present work composite nanoparticles with a magnetic core and a chitosan-based shell were produced as drug delivery systems for doxorubicin (DOX). The results show that composite nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic diameter within the nanometric range are able to encapsulate more DOX than polymeric nanoparticles alone corresponding also to a higher drug release. Moreover the synthesis method of the iron oxide nanoparticles influences the total amount of DOX released and a high content of iron oxide nanoparticles inhibits DOX release. The modelling of the experimental results revealed a release mechanism dominated by Fickian diffusion.

Matos, B., M. Martins, A. C. Samamed, D. Sousa, I. Ferreira, and M. S. Diniz, "Toxicity Evaluation of Quantum Dots (ZnS and CdS) Singly and Combined in Zebrafish (Danio rerio)", International journal of environmental research and public health, vol. 17, pp. 232, 2020.
Bari, M., J. Loureiro, M. Pudas, K. Tappura, K. Jaakola, M. Ruoho, I. Tittonen, S. Volz, C. Pavan, K. Costabello, D. Bollen, M. Haslam, and I. Ferreira, "TransFlexTeg: Large area transparent thin film thermoelectric devices for smart window and flexible applications", 14th European Conference on Thermoelectrics, ECT 2016, 20-23 Sep, 2016. Abstract

The main objective of TransFlexTeg is to develop an innovative large area distributed sensor network integrating transparent thin film thermoelectric devices and sensors for multifunctional smart windows and flexible high impact volume applications. Different breakthrough concepts will be developed: 1) large area high performance transparent thermoelectric thin films deposited on flexible substrates for thermal energy harvesting; 2) low cost high throughput thin film thermal sensors for thermal mapping and gesture sensing; 3) flexible smart windows and walls with energy harvesting, environmental sensing and wireless communication functionalities. This technology aims to demonstrate the functionalities of a smart window able to measure air quality and environmental parameters such as temperature, sun radiation and humidity. The data is automatically collected and can be utilized for controlling heating, cooling and ventilation systems of indoors. Active radio interface enables long range communication and long term data collection with WiFi or a similar base station. The proposed concept of smart windows replaces several conventional sensors with a distributed sensor network that is integrated invisibly into windows. In addition to the power generated from the thermal energy harvesting, the thermoelectric elements (TE) are also used as temperature sensors that, while being distributed over large area, enable thermal mapping of the area instead of just one or a few values measured from particular points. This smart window can be produced on glass. The active layer itself can be flexible glass layer or polymer sheet, which will significantly broaden the field of applications and improve business opportunities. Both can be manufactured in batch, or in Roll to Roll Atomic Layer Deposition (R2R ALD) process. High environmental impact is expected with savings of more than 25% of the electrical usage of residential homes and office buildings.

Loureiro, J., N. Neves, R. Barros, T. Mateus, R. Santos, S. Filonovich, S. Reparaz, C. M. S. Torres, F. Wyczisk, L. Divay, R. Martins, and I. Ferreira, "Transparent aluminium zinc oxide thin films with enhanced thermoelectric properties", J. Mater. Chem. A, vol. 2, issue 18, pp. 6649-6655, 2014. AbstractDOI

Improved thermoelectric properties of Aluminum Zinc Oxide (AZO) thin films deposited by radio frequency (RF) and pulsed Direct Current (DC) magnetron sputtering at room temperature are reported. In both techniques films were deposited using sintered and non-sintered targets produced from nano-powders. It is confirmed that both the Al doping concentration and film thickness control the thermoelectric, optical and structural properties of these films. Seebeck coefficients up to −134 μV K−1 and electrical conductivities up to 4 × 104 (Ω m)−1 lead to power factors up to 4 × 10−4 W mK−2, which is above the state-of-the-art for similar materials, almost by a factor of three. The thermoelectric I–V response of an optimized AZO element with a planar geometry was measured and a maximum power output of 2.3 nW, for a temperature gradient of 20 K near room temperature, was obtained. Moreover, the low thermal conductivity (<1.19 W mK−1) yields a ZT value above 0.1. This is an important result as it is at least three times higher than the ZT found in the literature for AZO, at room temperature, opening new doors for applications of this inexpensive, abundant and environmental friendly material, in a new era of thermoelectric devices.