RESUMEN
Fabrication of well-dispersed thin graphene oxide (GO) films (GOFs) has always been a challenge. Herein, a quick preparation method for GOFs was developed using our homemade GO with a large lateral size. The film can be prepared in less than 2 h via a metal framework-induced self-assembly process. The thickness of the films can be as thin as â¼15.5 µm, which will be thinner with compression. When it is used as a flexible modification layer on the Zn metal for aqueous Zn-ion batteries, Zn can grow along the [010] direction in plane and stack orderly along the [002] direction even on the Cu substrate with GOF through epitaxial plating owing to negligible lattice mismatch between the (002) plane of Zn and the hexagonal ring [also (002) plane for graphite] of GO. Meanwhile, the rich O groups on the GO film can provide abundant zincophilic points and promote uniform distribution of Zn2+ around the anode. Finally, dendrite-free and dense Zn stripping/plating can be achieved and well remained. The GOF@Zn symmetric cell reveals long cyclic stability of 1300 h at 1 mA cm-2 and 1 mA h cm-2. It still can remain at 350 h even at a very high current density of 10 mA cm-2 accompanied by a high areal capacity of 10 mA h cm-2. With the same plating amount of 5 mA h cm-2, the thickness of the plated Zn is only â¼10 µm with GOF modification, very close to the theoretical value of 8.54 µm, much thinner than that without GOF (â¼18 µm), indicating very dense deposition. Full cells assembled with the GOF@Zn anode and the MnO2 cathode exhibit a capacity retention rate of 71% over 1000 cycles at 0.7 A g-1, showing much better cycling performance than that using bare Zn.
RESUMEN
Osteoarthritis (OA), known as one of the most common types of aseptic inflammation of the musculoskeletal system, is characterized by chronic pain and whole-joint lesions. With cellular and molecular changes including senescence, inflammatory alterations, and subsequent cartilage defects, OA eventually leads to a series of adverse outcomes such as pain and disability. CRISPR-Cas-related technology has been proposed and explored as a gene therapy, offering potential gene-editing tools that are in the spotlight. Considering the genetic and multigene regulatory mechanisms of OA, we systematically review current studies on CRISPR-Cas technology for improving OA in terms of senescence, inflammation, and cartilage damage and summarize various strategies for delivering CRISPR products, hoping to provide a new perspective for the treatment of OA by taking advantage of CRISPR technology.