New Carbon Materials: Biological Applications of Functionalized Nanodiamond Materials
- 1 February 2008
- journal article
- concept
- Published by Wiley in Chemistry – A European Journal
- Vol. 14 (5), 1382-1390
- https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.200700987
Abstract
Nanoscale diamond particles have become an interesting material. Due to their inertness, small size and surface structure, they are well-suited for biological applications, such as labelling and drug delivery. Here we discuss the surface structure and functionalisation of diamond nanoparticles. Non-covalent as well as covalent grafting of bioactive moieties is possible, and first applications of fluorescent diamond nanoparticles are described.This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solution-phase 13C NMR Spectroscopy of Detonation NanodiamondChemistry Letters, 2007
- Characterization and application of single fluorescent nanodiamonds as cellular biomarkersProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2007
- Design of a luminescent biochip with nanodiamonds and bacterial luciferasePhysics of the Solid State, 2004
- Applications of nanodiamonds for separation and purification of proteinsPhysics of the Solid State, 2004
- Nanodiamonds for biological investigationsPhysics of the Solid State, 2004
- A new method for deaggregation of nanodiamond from explosive detonation: Graphitization-oxidation methodPhysics of the Solid State, 2004
- Biotin grafting on boron-doped diamondChemical Communications, 2003
- Ultradisperse diamond cluster aggregation studied by atomic force microscopyTechnical Physics Letters, 2000
- Two-photon-excited luminescence spectra in diamond nanocrystalsPhysics of the Solid State, 1999
- The structure of diamond nanoclustersPhysics of the Solid State, 1999