Scaling-up of carbon dots hydrothermal synthesis from sugars in a continuous flow microreactor system for biomedical application as in vitro antimicrobial drug nanocarrier

Sci Technol Adv Mater. 2023 Oct 17;24(1):2260298. doi: 10.1080/14686996.2023.2260298. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Carbon dots (CDs) are a new class of nanomaterials exhibiting high biocompatibility, water solubility, functionality, and tunable fluorescence (FL) property. Due to the limitations of batch hydrothermal synthesis in terms of low CDs yield and long synthesis duration, this work aimed to increase its production capacity through a continuous flow reactor system. The influence of temperature and time was first studied in a batch reactor for glucose, xylose, sucrose and table sugar precursors. CDs synthesized from sucrose precursor exhibited the highest quantum yield (QY) (175.48%) and the average diameter less than 10 nm (~6.8 ± 1.1 nm) when synthesized at 220°C for 9 h. For a flow reactor system, the best condition for CDs production from sucrose was 1 mL min-1 flow rate at 280°C, and 0.2 MPa pressure yielding 53.03% QY and ~ 6.5 ± 0.6 nm average diameter (6.6 mg min-1 of CDs productivity). CDs were successfully used as ciprofloxacin (CP) nanocarrier for antimicrobial activity study. The cytotoxicity study showed that no effect of CDs on viability of L-929 fibroblast cells was detected until 1000 µg mL-1 CDs concentration. This finding demonstrates that CDs synthesized via a flow reactor system have a high zeta potential and suitable surface properties for nano-theranostic applications.

Keywords: Carbon dots; L-929 cell cytotoxicity; antibacterial activity; continuous hydrothermal method; drug nanocarrier; health and well-being.

Grants and funding

The work was supported by National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) Contract no. N42A650248 for Talented Mid-Career Researchers, and partially subsidized by Specific League Funds from Mahidol University (Fiscal year 2023). A. Wibowo was supported by Mahidol University Scholarship for Ph.D. students 2022. M.J. Khan was supported by Mahidol University International Postdoctoral Fellowship 2023.