Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.579, 582-597, 2020
Enhanced magnetic heating efficiency at acidic pH for magnetic nanoemulsions stabilized with a weak polyelectrolyte
Hypothesis: Magnetic fluid hyperthermia has attracted considerable attention for cancer therapeutics. Magnetic nanoemulsions are potential candidates for multi-modal hyperthermia due to the possibility of volumetric loading with suitable chemo/photo-therapy agents. Often, the nanocarriers are stabilized using organic molecules that behave differently under varying pH and hence, an understanding of their interfacial behaviour is important for practical applications. Experiments: We probe the magnetic heating efficiency of poly acrylic acid (PAA) stabilized oil-in-water magnetic nanoemulsions, as a function of pH, where the conformational changes of the PAA molecules are studied using dynamic light scattering and inter-droplet force measurements. Findings: A similar to 50% enhanced heating efficiency is observed when solution pH is reduced from similar to 9 to 3, which is attributed to the coil-to-globule conformational changes of the PAA molecules. The increased ionization of the carboxylic acid groups, at higher pH, leads to reduced hydrophobicity that results in an increase in the interfacial thermal resistance causing a lower magneto-thermal heating efficiency at higher pH. The proposed interfacial heat transfer hypothesis is experimentally verified using thermal imaging, where a lower rate of heat transfer is obtained at higher pH. The observed enhanced hyperthermia efficiency at low pH is beneficial for designing efficient pH-responsive nano-carriers for multi-modal hyperthermia. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Magnetic fluid hyperthermia;Magnetic nanoemulsions;Polyelectrolyte;Poly acrylic acid;Interfacial heat transfer;pH-responsive hyperthermia;Dynamic hysteresis loop;Inter-droplet force measurement;Superparamagnetic nanoparticles