Facile preparation of gadolinium(iii) chelates functionalized carbon quantum dot-based contrast agent for magnetic resonance/fluorescence multimodal imaging
Published 2014 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Facile preparation of gadolinium(iii) chelates functionalized carbon quantum dot-based contrast agent for magnetic resonance/fluorescence multimodal imaging
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Volume 2, Issue 34, Pages 5541-5549
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Online
2014-06-24
DOI
10.1039/c4tb00709c
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Green synthesis of carbon dots with down- and up-conversion fluorescent properties for sensitive detection of hypochlorite with a dual-readout assay
- (2013) Bangda Yin et al. ANALYST
- pH-switched luminescence and sensing properties of a carbon dot–polyaniline composite
- (2013) Yan Mao et al. RSC Advances
- Carbon dots functionalized gold nanorod mediated delivery of doxorubicin: tri-functional nano-worms for drug delivery, photothermal therapy and bioimaging
- (2013) Sunil Pandey et al. Journal of Materials Chemistry B
- Photoluminescence Properties of Graphene versus Other Carbon Nanomaterials
- (2012) Li Cao et al. ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
- Highly Fluorescent Graphene Oxide-Poly(vinyl alcohol) Hybrid: An Effective Material for Specific Au3+ Ion Sensors
- (2012) Aniruddha Kundu et al. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
- The role of the lateral dimension of graphene oxide in the regulation of cellular responses
- (2012) Hua Yue et al. BIOMATERIALS
- Blue luminescent graphene quantum dots and graphene oxide prepared by tuning the carbonization degree of citric acid
- (2012) Yongqiang Dong et al. CARBON
- Gd(iii)-doped carbon dots as a dual fluorescent-MRI probe
- (2012) Athanasios B. Bourlinos et al. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY
- Magnetic-Nanoparticle-Doped Carbogenic Nanocomposite: An Effective Magnetic Resonance/Fluorescence Multimodal Imaging Probe
- (2012) Sachchidanand Srivastava et al. Small
- Luminescent Carbon Nanodots: Emergent Nanolights
- (2010) Sheila N. Baker et al. ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
- Fluorescence-enhanced gadolinium-doped zinc oxide quantum dots for magnetic resonance and fluorescence imaging
- (2010) Yanlan Liu et al. BIOMATERIALS
- In vitro toxicity evaluation of graphene oxide on A549 cells
- (2010) Yanli Chang et al. TOXICOLOGY LETTERS
- Blue Photoluminescence from Chemically Derived Graphene Oxide
- (2009) Goki Eda et al. ADVANCED MATERIALS
- Folate receptor targeted, rare-earth oxide nanocrystals for bi-modal fluorescence and magnetic imaging of cancer cells
- (2009) Sonali Setua et al. BIOMATERIALS
- Probing the Dynamic Effect of Cys-CdTe Quantum Dots toward Cancer Cells in Vitro
- (2009) Chunhui Wu et al. CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY
- Fast and Facile Preparation of Graphene Oxide and Reduced Graphene Oxide Nanoplatelets
- (2009) Jianfeng Shen et al. CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
- Nanosized Carbon Particles From Natural Gas Soot
- (2009) Lei Tian et al. CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
- Carbon Dots for Optical Imaging in Vivo
- (2009) Sheng-Tao Yang et al. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
- Multifunctional nanostructured materials for multimodal imaging, and simultaneous imaging and therapy
- (2008) Jaeyun Kim et al. CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS
- Photoluminescent Carbogenic Dots
- (2008) Athanasios B. Bourlinos et al. CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
- Imaging in the era of molecular oncology
- (2008) Ralph Weissleder et al. NATURE
- Induction of Autophagy in Porcine Kidney Cells by Quantum Dots: A Common Cellular Response to Nanomaterials?
- (2008) Stephan T. Stern et al. TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started