Nanocarriers are of paramount significance for drug delivery and nanomedicine technology. Given the imperfect systems and nonideal therapeutic effects, there are works to be done in synthesis as much as in biological studies, if not more so. Building the foundation of synthesis would offer more tools and deeper insights for exploring the biological systems with extreme complexity. This review aims at a broad‐scope summary and classification of nanocarriers for drug delivery, with focus on the synthetic strategy and structural implications. The nanocarriers are divided into four categories according to the loading principle: molecular‐level loading, surface loading, matrix loading, and cavity loading systems. Making comparisons across diverse nanocarrier systems would make it easier to see the fundamental characteristics, from where the weakness can be addressed and the strengths combined. The systematic comparisons may also inspire new ideas and methods.
Forged signature threatens the authenticity of personal identity. Here, an effective SERS anti-counterfeiting system is designed for personal signatures. Mixed ligands improve the complexity of Raman spectra and expand the coding capacity. Fourteen distinct combinations are created from mere five ligands, and great expansion is possible with modest expansion of the ligand library. On the other hand, the (Au-aggregate)@Ag@PSPAA nanostructure significantly increases the surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) intensity and stability so that excellent performance is achieved in SERS detection. By integrating these strategies, SERS inks are produced and applied in signature anti-counterfeiting. The resulting spectra are converted to barcodes that are readily detected through a smart phone APP. With these improvements, this work brings SERS one step closer toward practical applications in signature anti-counterfeiting.
Random aggregation of nanoparticles typically leads to step-growth kinetics and thus a low concentration of dimers. Here, we report a one-step method to produce gold nanoparticle dimers by exploiting a polystyrene-block-poly (acrylic acid) shell. Methods to fine-tune the surface charge repulsion and swelling allow us to control the extent of aggregation, stopping selectively at dimers.
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