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A comprehensive review summarizing the recent biomedical applications of functionalized carbon nanofibers
- Source :
- Journal of biomedical materials research. Part B, Applied biomaterialsREFERENCES. 109(11)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Since the discovery and fabrication of carbon nanofibers (CNFs) over a decade ago, scientists foster to discover novel myriad potential applications for this material in both biomedicine and industry. The unique economic viability, mechanical, electrical, optical, thermal, and structural properties of CNFs led to their rapid emergence. CNFs become an artificial intelligence platform for different uses, including a wide range of biomedical applications. Furthermore, CNFs have exceptionally large surface areas that make them flexible for tailoring and functionalization on demand. This review highlights the recent progress and achievements of CNFs in a wide range of biomedical fields, including cancer therapy, biosensing, tissue engineering, and wound dressing. Besides the synthetic techniques of CNFs, their potential toxicity and limitations, as biomaterials in real clinical settings, will be presented. This review discusses CNF's future investigations in other biomedical fields, including gene delivery and bioimaging and CNFs risk assessment. Scopus
- Subjects :
- Artificial intelligence
Biomedical fields
Nanofibers
Biocompatible Materials
02 engineering and technology
Functionalizations
Review
Biosensing Techniques
01 natural sciences
chemical vapor deposition
gene targeting
Economic viability
Carbon nanomaterials
Risk assessment
Gene Transfer Techniques
carbon nanofiber
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Biomedical applications
cancer therapy
Large surface area
0210 nano-technology
Medical applications
neurotransmitter
Materials science
Biomedical Engineering
Cancer therapy
biomedicine
regenerative medicine
Nanotechnology
Clinical settings
010402 general chemistry
Biomaterials
Carbon nanofibers
food preservative
On demand
Humans
Tissue engineering
Gene transfer
electrospinning
Recent progress
antimicrobial activity
nonhuman
Tissue Engineering
Carbon nanofiber
Bandages
Carbon
0104 chemical sciences
gene delivery system
Synthetic techniques
Wound dressing
Potential toxicity
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15524981
- Volume :
- 109
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of biomedical materials research. Part B, Applied biomaterialsREFERENCES
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3748b26551a92d0c8d68b1dd838f7461