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1.
Anal Chem ; 95(48): 17426-17437, 2023 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37972233

RESUMO

UV-vis spectrophotometry and spectrofluorometry are indispensable tools in education, research, and industrial process controls with widespread applications in nanoscience encompassing diverse nanomaterials and fields. Nevertheless, the prevailing spectroscopic interpretations and analyses often exhibit ambiguity and errors, particularly evident in the nanoscience literature. This analytical chemistry Perspective focuses on fostering evidence-based data interpretation in experimental studies of materials' UV-vis absorption, scattering, and fluorescence properties. We begin by outlining common issues observed in UV-vis and fluorescence analysis. Subsequently, we provide a summary of recent advances in commercial UV-vis spectrophotometric and spectrofluorometric instruments, emphasizing their potential to enhance scientific rigor in UV-vis and fluorescence analysis. Furthermore, we propose potential avenues for future developments in spectroscopic instrumentation and measurement strategies, aiming to further augment the utility of optical spectroscopy in nano research for samples where optical complexity surpasses existing tools. Through a targeted focus on the critical issues related to UV-vis and fluorescence properties of nanomaterials, this Perspective can serve as a valuable resource for researchers, educators, and practitioners.

2.
Anal Chem ; 95(27): 10279-10288, 2023 Jul 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37382879

RESUMO

Cascading optical processes involve sequential photon-matter interactions triggered by the same individual excitation photons. Parts I and II of this series explored cascading optical processes in scattering-only solutions (Part I) and solutions with light scatterers and absorbers but no emitters (Part II). The current work (Part III) focuses on the effects of cascading optical processes on spectroscopic measurements of fluorescent samples. Four types of samples were examined: (1) eosin Y (EOY), an absorber and emitter; (2) EOY mixed with plain polystyrene nanoparticles (PSNPs), which are pure scatterers; (3) EOY mixed with dyed PSNPs, which scatter and absorb light but do not emit; and (4) fluorescent PSNPs that are simultaneous light absorbers, scatterers, and emitters. Interference from both forward scattered and emitted photons can cause nonlinearity and spectral distortion in UV-vis extinction measurements. Sample absorption by nonfluorogenic chromophores reduces fluorescence intensity, while the effect of scattering on fluorophore fluorescence is complicated by several competing factors. A revised first-principles model is developed for correlating the experimental fluorescence intensity with the sample absorbance in solutions containing both scatterers and absorbers. The optical properties of fluorescent PSNPs of three different sizes were systematically investigated by using integrating-sphere-assisted resonance synchronous spectroscopy, linearly polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopy, UV-vis, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The insights and methodology provided in this work should help improve the reliability of spectroscopic analyses of fluorescent samples, where the interplay among light absorption, scattering, and emission can be complex.

3.
Anal Chem ; 2023 Jan 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36598877

RESUMO

Light scattering is a universal matter property that is especially prominent in nanoscale or larger materials. However, the effects of scattering-based cascading optical processes on experimental quantification of sample absorption, scattering, and emission intensities, as well as scattering and emission depolarization, have not been adequately addressed. Using a series of polystyrene nanoparticles (PSNPs) of different sizes as model analytes, we present a computational and experimental study on the effects of cascading light scattering on experimental quantification of NP scattering activities (scattering cross-section or molar coefficient), intensity, and depolarization. Part II and Part III of this series of companion articles explore the effects of cascading optical processes on sample absorption and fluorescence measurements, respectively. A general theoretical model is developed on how forward scattered light complicates the general applicability of Beer's law to the experimental UV-vis spectrum of scattering samples. The correlation between the scattering intensity and PSNP concentration is highly complicated with no robust linearity even when the scatterers' concentration is very low. Such complexity arises from the combination of concentration-dependence of light scattering depolarization and the scattering inner filter effects (IFEs). Scattering depolarization increases with the PSNP scattering extinction (thereby, its concentration) but can never reach unity (isotropic) due to the polarization dependence of the scattering IFE. The insights from this study are important for understanding the strengths and limitations of various scattering-based techniques for material characterization including nanoparticle quantification. They are also foundational for quantitative mechanistic understanding on the effects of light scattering on sample absorption and fluorescence measurements.

4.
Anal Chem ; 95(9): 4461-4469, 2023 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36787490

RESUMO

In Part I of the three companion articles, we reported the effects of light scattering on experimental quantification of scattering extinction, intensity, and depolarization in solutions that contain only scatterers with no significant absorption and photoluminescence activities. The present work (Part II) studies the effects of light scattering and absorption on a series of optical spectroscopic measurements done on samples that contain both absorbers and scatterers, but not emitters. The experimental UV-vis spectrum is the sum of the sample absorption and scattering extinction spectra. However, the upper limit of the experimental Beer's-law-abiding extinction can be limited prematurely by the interference of forward scattered light. Light absorption reduces not only the sample scattering intensity but also the scattering depolarization. The impact of scattering on sample light absorption is complicated, depending on whether the absorption of scattered light is taken into consideration. Scattering reduces light absorption along the optical path length from the excitation source to the UV-vis detector. However, the absorption of the scattered light can be adequate to compensate the reduced light absorption along such optical path, making the impacts of light scattering on the sample total light absorption negligibly small (<10%). The latter finding constitutes a critical validation of the integrating-sphere-assisted resonance synchronous spectroscopic method for experimental quantification of absorption and scattering contribution to the sample UV-vis extinction spectra. The techniques and general guidelines provided in this work should help improve the reliability of optical spectroscopic characterization of nanoscale or larger materials, many of which are simultaneous absorbers and scatterers. The insights from this work are foundational for Part III of this series of work, which is on the cascading optical processes on spectroscopic measurements of fluorescent samples.

5.
Anal Chem ; 94(33): 11610-11618, 2022 08 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35960824

RESUMO

Integrating spheres (IS) have been used extensively for the characterization of light absorption in turbid samples. However, converting the IS-based sample absorption coefficient to the UV-vis absorbance quantified with a double-beam UV-vis spectrophotometer is challenging. Herein, we report an integrating-sphere-assisted resonance synchronous (ISARS) spectroscopy method performed with conventional spectrofluorometers equipped with an integrating-sphere accessory. Mathematical models and experimental procedures for quantifying the sample, solvent, and instrument-baseline ISARS intensity spectra were provided. A three-parameter analytical model has been developed for correlating the ISARS-based UV-vis absorbance and the absorbance measured with double-beam instruments. This ISARS method enables the quantitative separation of light absorption and scattering contribution to the sample UV-vis extinction spectrum measured with double-beam UV-vis spectrophotometers. Example applications of this ISARS technique are demonstrated with a series of representative samples differing significantly in their optical complexities, from approximately pure absorbers, pure scatterers, to simultaneous light absorbers, scatterers, and emitters under resonance excitation and detection conditions.


Assuntos
Análise Espectral , Espectrofotometria/métodos
6.
Anal Chem ; 94(19): 7123-7131, 2022 05 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35507917

RESUMO

The popular textbook and literature model I(λx,λm) = K(λx,λm)(1-10-Ax) or its variants for correlating the sample absorption and fluorescence often fails even for the simplest samples where the fluorophore is the only light absorber. Reported is a first-principle model I(λx,λm) = K(λx,λm)Ax,f10-(Ax,sdx+Am,sdm) for correlating the sample fluorescence measured with a conventional spectrofluorometer and its UV-vis absorbance quantified with a conventional UV-vis spectrophotometer. This model can be simplified or expanded for a variety of fluorescence analyses. First, it enables curve-fitting fluorescence intensity as a function of the fluorophore or sample absorbance over a sample concentration range impossible with existing models. Second, it provides the theoretical foundation for an inner-filter-effect (IFE)-correction method developed earlier and explains mathematically the linearity between the IFE-corrected fluorescence and the fluorophore concentration or absorbance. Third, this model can be expanded for quantitative mechanistic studies of fluorescence intensity variations triggered by stimuli treatments. One demonstrated example is to quantify temperature effects on the emission-wavelength-specific and total fluorescence quantum yield of anthracene. We expect that this first-principle model will be broadly adopted for both student education that promotes evidence-based learning and a variety of fluorescence applications where disentangling sample absorption and emission are critical for reliable data analysis.


Assuntos
Corantes Fluorescentes , Humanos , Espectrometria de Fluorescência/métodos
7.
Anal Chem ; 92(7): 5346-5353, 2020 04 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32126174

RESUMO

Reliable quantification of the optical properties of fluorescent quantum dots (QDs) is critical for their photochemical, -physical, and -biological applications. Presented herein is the experimental quantification of photon scattering, absorption, and on-resonance-fluorescence (ORF) activities of CdSe/CdS core/shell fluorescent QDs as a function of the shell sizes and geometries. Four spherical QDs (SQDs) with different diameters and four rod-like QDs (RQDs) with different aspect ratios (ARs) have been analyzed using UV-vis, fluorescence, and the recent polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopic (PRS2) methods. All quantum dots are simultaneous absorbers and scatterers in the UV-vis wavelength region, and they all exhibit strong ORF emission in the wavelength regions where the QDs both absorb and emit. The absorption and scattering cross-sections of the CdS shell are linearly and quadratically, respectively, proportional to the shell volume for both the SQDs and RQDs. However, the effects of CdS shell coating on the core optical properties are different between SQDs and RQDs. For RQDs, increasing the CdS shell volume through the length elongation has no effect on either the peak wavelength or intensity of the CdSe core UV-vis absorption and ORF, but it reduces the QD fluorescence depolarization. In contrast, increasing CdS shell volume in the SQDs induces red-shift in the CdSe core peak UV-vis absorption and ORF wavelengths, and increases their peak cross-sections, but it has no effect on the SQD fluorescence depolarization. The RQD ORF cross-sections and quantum yields are significantly higher than their respective counterparts for the SQDs with similar particle sizes (volumes). While these new insights should be significant for the QD design, characterization, and applications, the methodology presented in this work is directly applicable for quantifying the optical activities of optically complex materials where the common UV-vis spectrometry and fluorescence spectroscopy are inadequate.

8.
Anal Chem ; 91(13): 8540-8548, 2019 07 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31134802

RESUMO

Optical properties of fluorescent materials including their UV-vis absorption, scattering, and on-resonance fluorescence activities are strongly wavelength-dependent. Reported herein is a divide-and-conquer strategy for experimental quantification of fundamental optical constants of fluorescent nanomaterials including their UV-vis absorption, scattering, and on-resonance-fluorescence (ORF) cross-section spectra and ORF fluorescence and light scattering depolarization spectra. The fluorophore UV-vis extinction spectrum is first divided into a blue and a red wavelength region. The UV-vis extinction cross-section spectrum in the blue wavelength region is decomposed into its absorption and scattering extinction spectra straightforwardly using the established polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopic technique. In its red wavelength region, however, the fluorophores can be simultaneous photon absorbers, scatterers, and anti-Stokes-shifted, on-resonance, and Stokes-shifted fluorescence emitters under the resonance excitation and detection conditions. A polarized anti-Stokes'-shifted, on-resonance, and Stokes'-shifted spectroscopic method is developed for quantifying fluorophore absorption, scattering, one-resonance fluorescence (ORF) cross-section spectra, and scattering and ORF fluorescence depolarization spectra in this wavelength region. Example applications of the presented techniques were demonstrated with fluorescent polystyrene nanoparticles, fluorescent quantum dots, and molecular fluorophores Rhodamine 6G and Eosin Y.

9.
Anal Chem ; 90(12): 7406-7414, 2018 06 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29756449

RESUMO

Presented herein is the ratiometric bandwidth-varied polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopy (BVPRS2) method for quantification of material optical activity spectra. These include the sample light absorption and scattering cross-section spectrum, the scattering depolarization spectrum, and the fluorescence emission cross-section and depolarization spectrum in the wavelength region where the sample both absorbs and emits. This ratiometric BVPRS2 spectroscopic method is a self-contained technique capable of quantitatively decoupling material fluorescence and light scattering signal contribution to its ratiometric BVPRS2 spectra through the linear curve-fitting of the ratiometric BVPRS2 signal as a function of the wavelength bandwidth used in the PRS2 measurements. Example applications of this new spectroscopic method are demonstrated with materials that can be approximated as pure scatterers, simultaneous photon absorbers/emitters, simultaneous photon absorbers/scatterers, and finally simultaneous photon absorbers/scatterers/emitters. Because the only instruments needed for this ratiometric BVPRS2 technique are the conventional UV-vis spectrophotometer and spectrofluorometer, this work should open doors for routine decomposition of material UV-vis extinction spectrum into its absorption and scattering component spectra. The methodology and insights provided in this work should be of broad significance to all chemical research that involves photon/matter interactions.

10.
Anal Chem ; 90(1): 785-793, 2018 01 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29171268

RESUMO

Using the recent polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopic (PRS2) technique, we reported the quantification of photon extinction, absorption, scattering cross-section spectra, and scattering depolarization spectra for AuNPs of different sizes and shapes. The effects of the solvent composition, ligand functionalization, and nanoparticle aggregation on the AuNP photon absorption and scattering have also been experimentally quantified. The light scattering depolarization is close to 0 for gold nanospheres (AuNSs) crossing the entire UV-vis region but is strongly wavelength-dependent for gold nanorods (AuNRs). Increasing the dielectric constant of the medium surrounding AuNPs either by solvents or ligand adsorption increases photon absorption and scattering but has no significant impact on the AuNP scattering depolarization. Nanoparticle aggregation increases AuNP photon scattering. However, even the extensively aggregated AuNPs remain predominantly photon absorbers with photon scattering-to-extinction ratios all less than 0.03 for the investigated AuNP aggregates at the AuNP peak extinction wavelength. The AuNP scattering depolarization initially increases with the AuNP aggregation but decreases when aggregation further progresses. The insights from this study are important for a wide range of AuNP applications that involve photon/matter interactions, while the provided methodology is directly applicable for experimental quantification of optical properties for nanomaterials that are commonly simultaneously photon absorbers and scatterers.

11.
J Org Chem ; 83(16): 9497-9503, 2018 08 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29896959

RESUMO

C-Unsubstituted 1,2-diazetidines, a rarely studied type of four-membered heterocyclic compounds, were synthesized through an operationally simple intermolecular vicinal disubstitution reaction. 1,2-Diazetidine derivatives bearing various N-arylsulfonyl groups were readily accessed and studied by experimental and computed Raman spectra. The ring-opening reaction of the diazetidine was explored and resulted in the identification of a selective N-N bond cleavage with thiols as nucleophiles, which stereoselectively produced a new class of N-sulfenylimine derivatives with C-aminomethyl groups.

12.
Analyst ; 143(14): 3382-3389, 2018 Jul 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29897058

RESUMO

The sample inner filter effect (IFE) induces spectral distortion and affects the linearity between intensity and analyte concentration in fluorescence, Raman, surface enhanced Raman, and Rayleigh light scattering measurements. Existing spectrofluorometric-based measurements treat light scattering and absorption identically in their sample IFEs. Reported herein is the finding that photon scattering and absorption differ drastically in inducing the sample IFE in Stokes-shifted fluorescence (SSF) spectrum, resonance synchronous spectrum (RS2), and the polarized resonance synchronous spectrum (PRS2) measurements. Absorption with an absorption extinction as small as 0.05 imposes significant IFE on SSF, RS2, and PRS2 measurements. However, no significant IFE occurs even when the scattering extinction is as high as 0.9. For samples that both absorb and scatter light, one should decompose their UV-vis extinction spectra into absorption and scattering extinction component spectra before correcting the sample IFE. An iteration PRS2 method was introduced for the experimental decoupling of the photon absorption and scattering contribution. The methodology presented in this work can be easily implemented by researchers with access to one conventional UV-vis spectrophotometer and one spectrofluorometer equipped with a pair of excitation and detection polarizers. This work should be of broad significance in chemical research given the popularity of fluorescence spectroscopy in material characterization applications.

13.
Anal Chem ; 89(23): 12705-12712, 2017 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29115124

RESUMO

Rayleigh scattering is a universal material property because all materials have nonzero polarizability. Reliable quantification of the material light scattering cross section in the liquid phase and its depolarization spectra is, however, challenging due to a host of sample and instrument issues. Using the recently developed polarized resonance synchronous spectroscopic method, we reported the light scattering cross section and depolarization spectra measured for a total of 29 liquids including water, methanol, ethanol, 1-propanol, 1-butanol, dimethylformamide, carbon disulfide, dimethyl sulfoxide, hexane and two hexane isomers (3-methylpentane and 2,3-dimethylbutane), tetrahydrofuran, cyclohexane, acetonitrile, pyridine, chloromethanes including di-, tri, tetrachloromethane, acetone, benzene and eight benzene derivatives (toluene, fluorobenzene, 1,2-, 1,3-, and 1,4-difluorobenzene, chlorobenzene, 1,2- and 1,3-dichlorobenzene, and nitrobenzene). The solvent light scattering depolarization is wavelength-independent for the model solvents, and it varies from 0.023 ± 0.011 for CCl4 to 0.619 ± 0.022 for nitrobenzene. The light scattering cross-section spectra can be approximated with the function of σ(λ) = αλ-4 with the α value varying from 7.2 ± 0.2 × 10-45 cm6 for water to a maximum of 8.5 ± 0.6 × 10-43 cm6 for nitrobenzene. Structural isomerization has no significant effect on either the depolarization or the scattering cross sections for both hexanes and difluorobenzene isomers. This work represents the most comprehensive experimental study on liquid light scattering features. The insight from this work should be important for understanding the correlation between the material structure and optical properties. The described method can be readily implemented by researchers with access to conventional spectrofluorometers equipped with excitation and detection polarizers.

14.
Anal Chem ; 89(12): 6686-6694, 2017 06 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28503920

RESUMO

Fluorophores are important but optically complicated photonic materials as they are simultaneous photon absorbers, emitters, and scatterers. Existing studies on fluorophore optical properties have been focused almost exclusively on its photon absorption and Stokes-shifted fluorescence (SSF) with scant information on the fluorophore photon scattering and on-resonance fluorescence (ORF). Presented herein is a unified theoretical framework and experimental approach for quantification of the fluorophore SSF, ORF, and scattering depolarization and anisotropy using a combination of fluorophore UV-vis, fluorescence emission, and resonance synchronous spectroscopic spectral measurements. A mathematical model for calculating fluorophore ORF and scattering cross sections has been developed that uses polystyrene nanoparticles as the external reference. The fluorophore scattering cross section is ∼10-fold smaller than its ORF counterparts for all the six model fluorophores, but more than 6 orders of magnitude larger than the water scattering cross section. Another finding is that the fluorophore ORF has a depolarization close to 1, while its Rayleigh scattering has zero depolarization. This enables the experimental separation of the fluorophore ORF and photon scattering features in the fluorophore resonance synchronous spectra. In addition to opening a new avenue for material characterization, the methods and insights derived from this study should be important for developing new analytical methods that exploit the fluorophore ORF and photon scattering properties.

15.
Anal Chem ; 88(7): 3624-31, 2016 Apr 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26956547

RESUMO

Thiols, including organothiol and thiol-containing biomolecules, are among the most important classes of chemicals that are used broadly in organic synthesis, biological chemistry, and nanosciences. Thiol pKa values are key indicators of thiol reactivity and functionality. Reported herein is an internally referenced Raman-based pH titration method that enables reliable quantification of thiol pKa values for both mono- and dithiols in water. The degree of thiol ionization is monitored directly using the peak intensity of the S-H stretching feature in the 2600 cm(-1) region relative to an internal reference peak as a function of the titration solution's pH. The thiol pKa values and Raman activity relative to its internal reference were then determined by curve fitting the experimental data with equations derived on the basis of the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. Using this Raman titration method, we determined for the first time the first and second thiol pKa values for 1,2-benzenedithiol in water. This Raman-based method is convenient to implement, and its underlying theory is easy to follow. It should therefore have broad application for thiol pKa determinations and verification.


Assuntos
Compostos de Sulfidrila/química , Modelos Químicos , Solubilidade , Análise Espectral Raman , Titulometria/métodos
16.
Anal Chem ; 88(5): 2891-8, 2016 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26829097

RESUMO

Demonstrated herein is a UV-vis Ratiometric Resonance Synchronous Spectroscopic (R2S2, pronounced as "R-two-S-two" for simplicity) technique where the R2S2 spectrum is obtained by dividing the resonance synchronous spectrum of a NP-containing solution by the solvent resonance synchronous spectrum. Combined with conventional UV-vis measurements, this R2S2 method enables experimental quantification of the absolute optical cross sections for a wide range of molecular and nanoparticle (NP) materials that range optically from pure photon absorbers or scatterers to simultaneous photon absorbers and scatterers, simultaneous photon absorbers and emitters, and all the way to simultaneous photon absorbers, scatterers, and emitters in the UV-vis wavelength region. Example applications of this R2S2 method were demonstrated for quantifying the Rayleigh scattering cross sections of solvents including water and toluene, absorption and resonance light scattering cross sections for plasmonic gold nanoparticles, and absorption, scattering, and on-resonance fluorescence cross sections for semiconductor quantum dots (Qdots). On-resonance fluorescence quantum yields were quantified for the model molecular fluorophore Eosin Y and fluorescent Qdots CdSe and CdSe/ZnS. The insights and methodology presented in this work should be of broad significance in physical and biological science research that involves photon/matter interactions.

17.
Anal Chem ; 88(18): 9199-206, 2016 09 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27561996

RESUMO

Existing studies on molecular fluorescence have almost exclusively been focused on Stokes-shifted fluorescence spectroscopy (SSF) in which the emitted photon is detected at the wavelengths longer than that for the excitation photons. Information on fluorophore on-resonance fluorescence (ORF) and resonance Rayleigh scattering (RRS) is limited and often problematic due to the complex interplay of the fluorophore photon absorption, ORF emission, RRS, and solvent Rayleigh scattering. Reported herein is a relatively large-scale systematic study on fluorophore ORF and RRS using the conventional UV-vis extinction and SSF measurements in combination with the recently reported ratiometric resonance synchronous spectroscopic (R2S2, pronounced as "R-Two-S-Two") method. A series of fundamental parameters including fluorophore ORF cross sections and quantum yields have been quantified for the first time for a total of 12 molecular and 6 semiconductor quantum dot (QD) fluorophores. All fluorophore spectra comprise a well-defined Gaussian peak with a full width at half-maximum ranging from 4 to 30 nm. However, the RRS features of fluorophores differ drastically. The effect of fluorophore aggregation on its RRS, UV-vis, R2S2, and SSF spectra was also discussed. This work highlights the critical importance of the combined UV-vis extinction, SSF, and R2S2 spectroscopic measurements for material characterizations. The method and insights described in this work can be directly used for improving the reliability of RRS spectroscopic methods in chemical analysis. In addition, it should pave the way for developing novel R2S2-based analytical applications.

18.
Anal Chem ; 87(9): 4917-24, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25864855

RESUMO

Fluorescence and Raman inner filter effects (IFE) cause spectral distortion and nonlinearity between spectral signal intensity with increasing analyte concentration. Convenient and effective correction of fluorescence IFE has been an active research goal for decades. Presented herein is the finding that fluorescence and Raman IFE can be reliably corrected using the equation I(corr)/I(obsd) = 10(dxAx + dmAm) when the effective excitation and emission path lengths, dx and dm, of a fluorophotometer are determined by simple linear curve-fitting of Raman intensities of a series of water Raman reference samples that have known degrees of Raman IFEs. The path lengths derived with one set of Raman measurements at one specific excitation wavelength are effective for correcting fluorescence and Raman IFEs induced by any chromophore or fluorophore, regardless of the excitation and emission wavelengths. The IFE-corrected fluorescence intensities are linearly correlated to fluorophore concentration over 5 orders of magnitude (from 5.9 nM to 0.59 mM) for 2-aminopurine in a 1 cm × 0.17 cm fluorescence cuvette. This water Raman-based method is easy to implement. It does not involve complicated instrument geometry determination or difficult data manipulation. This work should be of broad significance to physical and biological sciences given the popularity of fluorescence techniques in analytical applications.


Assuntos
Água/química , Fluorescência , Fluorometria , Espectrofotometria Ultravioleta , Análise Espectral Raman
19.
Langmuir ; 31(33): 8998-9005, 2015 Aug 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26258255

RESUMO

Ion-pairing, the association of oppositely charged ionic species in solution and at liquid/solid interfaces has been proposed as a key factor for a wide range of physicochemical phenomena. However, experimental observations of ion pairing at the ligand/solid interfaces are challenging due to difficulties in differentiating ion species in the electrical double layer from that adsorbed on the solid surfaces. Using surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy in combination with electrolyte washing, we presented herein the first direct experimental evidence of ion pairing, the coadsorption of oppositely charged ionic species onto gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Ion pairing reduces the electrolyte concentration threshold in inducing AuNP aggregation and enhances the competitiveness of electrolyte over neutral molecules for binding to AuNP surfaces. The methodology and insights provided in this work should be important for understanding electrolyte interfacial interactions with nanoparticles.


Assuntos
Eletrólitos/química , Ouro/química , Nanopartículas Metálicas/química , Transição de Fase , Análise Espectral Raman
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