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Bismuth oxybromide nanosheets accelerating healing of infected wounds at movable part through self-motion promoted piezo- and near infrared light activated photo-performance

  • Rui Chen
  • , Pengcheng Yu
  • , Biao Zhang*
  • , Zhiqi Yang
  • , Jinjie Wang
  • , Yuhang Wang
  • , Lili Wang
  • , Chunnuan Yu
  • , Yuan Qiang Li*
  • , Yan Cheng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The healing of wounds at movable part remains a significant challenge due to bacterial infections and mechanical external forces induced by unavoidable movements. Herein, bismuth oxybromide nanosheets (BiOBr NSs) with piezoelectric properties were developed to promote wound healing in such regions by converting repetitive mechanical motion into a driving force that activates BiOBr generating an electric field at the wound site. Additionally, oxygen vacancies were also introduced into BiOBr NSs to impart near infrared (NIR)-triggered photothermal and photodynamic antibacterial activity. Two types of BiOBr NSs were synthesized, differing in oxygen vacancy density: BiOBr-L with a lower density and BiOBr–H with a higher density. BiOBr–H NSs exhibited enhanced electron-hole separation ability, resulting in superior antibacterial efficacy with NIR irradiation compared to BiOBr-L NSs. Furthermore, both BiOBr NSs promoted cell migration and proliferation due to their piezoelectric properties. In vivo assessments demonstrated that BiOBr NSs significantly accelerated the healing of neck wounds. This study not only presents an effective strategy for designing wound dressings for wounds at movable parts but also broadens the biomedical applications of nanomaterials with piezoelectric and photoelectric properties.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number102639
    JournalMaterials Today Chemistry
    Volume45
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025
    MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

    Funding

    This work was supported by Program of Jilin Provincial Development and Reform Commission (2023C028-9, 2022C043-9 and 2024C017-1), National Natural Science Foundation of China (32171396) and Science and Technology Development Project Foundation of Jilin Province (YDZJ202201ZYTS682).

    Keywords

    • Antibacterial
    • Near infrared light
    • Neck wounds
    • Oxygen vacancy
    • Piezoelectric nanomaterials

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