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Dive into the research topics where Zhongze Gu is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhongze Gu.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Bioinspired Multifunctional Janus Particles for Droplet Manipulation

Yuanjin Zhao; Hongcheng Gu; Zhuoying Xie; Ho Cheung Shum; Baoping Wang; Zhongze Gu

Inspired by the nipple arrays covering mosquitoes eyes and the heterogeneous textured bumps on beetles backs, we have developed a new kind of Janus particle with multiplexed features, such as different boss arrays and wettability compartmentalized on the same surface, and an anisotropic color and magnetic properties. The prepared Janus particles can be anchored at the air-water interface and act as a highly flexible barrier for preventing coalescence of water droplets. The incorporation of magnetic nanoparticles can give the Janus particles magnetic responsiveness for controlled transportation and coalescence of liquid marbles, while the structural colors in the Janus particles can be employed for barcoding of the encapsulated liquid marbles. We believe that these small Janus particles have great potential as components for constructing intelligent interfacial objects.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Photonic Crystal Microcapsules for Label‐free Multiplex Detection

Baofen Ye; Haibo Ding; Yao Cheng; Hongcheng Gu; Yuanjin Zhao; Zhuoying Xie; Zhongze Gu

A novel suspension array, which possesses the joint advantages of photonic crystal encoded technology, bioresponsive hydrogels, and photonic crystal sensors with capability of full multiplexing label-free detection is developed.


Nanoscale | 2012

Colorimetric photonic hydrogel aptasensor for the screening of heavy metal ions

Baofen Ye; Yuanjin Zhao; Yao Cheng; Tingting Li; Zhuoying Xie; Xiangwei Zhao; Zhongze Gu

We have developed a robust method for the visual detection of heavy metal ions (such as Hg(2+) and Pb(2+)) by using aptamer-functionalized colloidal photonic crystal hydrogel (CPCH) films. The CPCHs were derived from a colloidal crystal array of monodisperse silica nanoparticles, which were polymerized within the polyacrylamide hydrogel. The heavy metal ion-responsive aptamers were then cross-linked in the hydrogel network. During detection, the specific binding of heavy metal ions and cross-linked single-stranded aptamers in the hydrogel network caused the hydrogel to shrink, which was detected as a corresponding blue shift in the Bragg diffraction peak position of the CPCHs. The shift value could be used to estimate, quantitatively, the amount of the target ion. It was demonstrated that our CPCH aptasensor could screen a wide concentration range of heavy metal ions with high selectivity and reversibility. In addition, these aptasensors could be rehydrated from dried gels for storage and aptamer protection. It is anticipated that our technology may also be used in the screening of a broad range of metal ions in food, drugs and the environment.


Advanced Materials | 2014

An Optical Nose Chip Based on Mesoporous Colloidal Photonic Crystal Beads

Zhuoying Xie; Kaidi Cao; Yuanjin Zhao; Lin Bai; Hongcheng Gu; Hua Xu; Zhongze Gu

An optical nose chip is developed using surface functionalized mesoporous colloidal photonic crystal beads as elements. The prepared optical nose chip displays excellent discrimination among a very wide range of compounds, not only the simplex organic vapors from the different or same chemical family, but also the complex expiratory air from different people.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2013

Photonic crystal for gas sensing

Hua Xu; Pin Wu; Chu Zhu; Abdelrahman Elbaz; Zhongze Gu

Photonic crystal (PhCs) based sensing technology has gained more and more attention because of its obvious advantages in sensitivity, stability, security, miniaturisation, portability, on-line use and remote monitoring. Many PhC sensors have been proposed based on their novel structure and unique optical properties. In this review, we will describe the recent progress in the use of natural and artificial PhC materials for gas/vapor sensing, including Morpho butterfly wings and their mimicry of nanostructures, porous silicon, Bragg stacks, colloidal crystals and inverse opal. Here we will discuss the PhCs with different structures and their respective gas sensing properties, focusing on the description of the functional structure of the PhCs materials and their sensing mechanisms.


Small | 2013

Tailoring colloidal photonic crystals with wide viewing angles.

Hongcheng Gu; Yuanjin Zhao; Yao Cheng; Zhuoying Xie; Fei Rong; Jiaqi Li; Baoping Wang; Zhongze Gu

Photonic crystal materials are developed from colloidal crystal fibers or beads. As the fibers have cylindrical symmetry, the fiber-composed PhCs show anisotropic angle independence. By contrast, the bead-composed PhCs display angle-independent structural colors because of the spherical symmetry of their bead elements.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Controlled Fabrication of Bioactive Microfibers for Creating Tissue Constructs Using Microfluidic Techniques.

Yao Cheng; Yunru Yu; Fanfan Fu; Jie Wang; Luoran Shang; Zhongze Gu; Yuanjin Zhao

The fabrication of heterogeneous microstructures, which exert precise control over the distribution of different cell types within biocompatible constructs, is important for many tissue engineering applications. Here, bioactive microfibers with tunable morphologies, structures, and components are generated and employed for creating different tissue constructs. Multibarrel capillary microfluidics with multiple laminar flows are used for continuously spinning these microfibers. With an immediate gelation reaction of the cell dispersed alginate solutions, the cell-laden alginate microfibers with the tunable morphologies and structures as the designed multiple laminar flows can be generated. The performances of the microfibers in cell culture are improved by incorporating bioactive polymers, such as extracellular matrix (ECM) or methacrylated gelatin (GelMA), into the alginate. It is demonstrated that a series of complex three-dimensional (3D) architectural cellular buildings, including biomimic vessels and scaffolds, can be created using these bioactive microfibers.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Cells Cultured on Core-Shell Photonic Crystal Barcodes for Drug Screening.

Fanfan Fu; Luoran Shang; Fuyin Zheng; Zhuoyue Chen; Huan Wang; Jie Wang; Zhongze Gu; Yuanjin Zhao

The development of effective drug screening platforms is an important task for biomedical engineering. Here, a novel methacrylated gelatin (GelMA) hydrogel-encapsulated core-shell photonic crystal (PhC) barcode particle was developed for three-dimensional cell aggregation culture and drug screening. The GelMA shells of the barcode particles enable creation of a three-dimensional extracellular matrix (ECM) microenvironment for cell adhesion and growth, while the PhC cores of the barcode particles provide stable diffraction peaks that can encode different cell spheroids during culture and distinguish their biological response during drug testing. The applicability of this cell spheroids-on-barcodes platform was investigated by testing the cytotoxic effect of tegafur (TF), a prodrug of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), on barcode particle-loaded liver HepG2 and HCT-116 colonic tumor cell spheroids. The cytotoxicity of TF against the HCT-116 tumor cell spheroids was enhanced in systems using cocultures of HepG2 and NIH-3T3 cells, indicating the effectiveness of this multiple cell spheroids-on-barcodes platform for drug screening.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Microfluidic Generation of Porous Microcarriers for Three-Dimensional Cell Culture

Jie Wang; Yao Cheng; Yunru Yu; Fanfan Fu; Zhuoyue Chen; Yuanjin Zhao; Zhongze Gu

Inspired by the microstructure of the stem cell niche, which is generally composed of adjacent cell protection layers and an extracellular matrix (ECM), we present novel microfluidic porous microcarriers for cell culture that consist of external-internal connected scaffold structures and biopolymer matrix fillers. The biomimetic scaffold structure of the porous microcarriers not only avoids the imposition of shear forces on the encapsulated cells but also provides a confined microenvironment for cell self-assembly, whereas the biopolymers in the porous cores of the microcarriers can act as an ECM microenvironment to promote the formation of multicellular spheroid aggregates for biomedical applications.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012

Spherical porphyrin sensor array based on encoded colloidal crystal beads for VOC vapor detection.

Hua Xu; Kaidi Cao; Haibo Ding; Qifeng Zhong; Hongcheng Gu; Zhuoying Xie; Yuanjin Zhao; Zhongze Gu

A spherical porphyrin sensor array using colloidal crystal beads (CCBs) as the encoding microcarriers has been developed for VOC vapor detection. Six different porphyrins were coated onto the CCBs with distinctive encoded reflection peaks via physical adsorption and the sensor array was fabricated by placing the prepared porphyrin-modified CCBs together. The change in fluorescence color of the porphyrin-modified CCBs array serves as the detection signal for discriminating between different VOC vapors and the reflection peak of the CCBs serves as the encoding signal to distinguish between different sensors. It was demonstrated that the VOC vapors detection using the prepared sensor array showed excellent discrimination: not only could the compounds from the different chemical classes be easily differentiated (e.g., alcohol vs acids vs ketones) but similar compounds from the same chemical family (e.g., methanol vs ethanol) and the same compound with different concentration ((e.g., Sat. ethanol vs 60 ppm ethanol vs 10 ppm ethanol) could also be distinguished. The detection reproducibility and the humidity effect were also investigated. The present spherical sensor array, with its simple preparation, rapid response, high sensitivity, reproducibility, and humidity insensitivity, and especially with stable and high-throughput encoding, is promising for real applications in artificial olfactory systems.

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