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1.
Nano Lett ; 2024 Oct 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39360649

RESUMO

To achieve chiral amplification, life uses small chiral molecules as building blocks to construct hierarchical chiral architectures that can realize advanced physiological functions. Inspired by the chiral amplification strategy of nature, we herein demonstrate that the chiral assembly of chiral gold nanorods (GNRs) leads to enhanced optical asymmetry factors (g-factors), up to 0.24. The assembly of chiral GNRs, dictated by structural self-matching, leads to g-factors with over 100-fold higher values than those of individual chiral GNRs, as confirmed by numerical simulations. Moreover, the efficient optical asymmetry of chiral GNR assemblies enables their application as highly sensitive sensors of adenosine triphosphate (ATP detection limit of 1.0 µM), with selectivity against adenosine diphosphate and adenosine monophosphate.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(26): e202403116, 2024 Jun 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38646964

RESUMO

Handedness is an essential attribute of chiral nanocrystals, having a major influence on their properties. During chemical growth, the handedness of nanocrystals is usually tuned by selecting the corresponding enantiomer of chiral molecules involved in asymmetric growth, often known as chiral inducers. We report that, even using the same chiral inducer enantiomer, the handedness of chiral gold nanocrystals can be reversed by using Au nanorod seeds with either single crystalline or pentatwinned structure. This effect holds for chiral growth induced both by amino acids and by chiral micelles. Although it was challenging to discern the morphological handedness for L-cystine-directed particles, even using electron tomography, both cases showed circular dichroism bands of opposite sign, with nearly mirrored chiroptical signatures for chiral micelle-directed growth, along with quasi-helical wrinkles of inverted handedness. These results expand the chiral growth toolbox with an effect that might be exploited to yield a host of interesting morphologies with tunable optical properties.

3.
Nano Lett ; 23(21): 9880-9886, 2023 Nov 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37877612

RESUMO

The bottom-up production of chiral gold nanomaterials holds great potential for the advancement of biosensing and nano-optics, among other applications. Reproducible preparations of colloidal nanomaterials with chiral morphology have been reported, using cosurfactants or chiral inducers such as thiolated amino acids. However, the underlying growth mechanisms for these nanomaterials remain insufficiently understood. We introduce herein a purposely devised chiral inducer, a cysteine modified with a hydrophobic chain, as a versatile chiral inducer. The amphiphilic and chiral features of this molecule provide control over the chiral morphology and the chiroptical signature of the obtained nanoparticles by simply varying the concentration of chiral inducer. These results are supported by circular dichroism and electromagnetic modeling as well as electron tomography to analyze structural evolution at the facet scale. Our observations suggest complex roles for the factors involved in chiral synthesis: the chemical nature of the chiral inducers and the influence of cosurfactants.

4.
Adv Mater ; 35(1): e2208299, 2023 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36239273

RESUMO

A robust and reproducible methodology to prepare stable inorganic nanoparticles with chiral morphology may hold the key to the practical utilization of these materials. An optimized chiral growth method to prepare fourfold twisted gold nanorods is described herein, where the amino acid cysteine is used as a dissymmetry inducer. Four tilted ridges are found to develop on the surface of single-crystal nanorods upon repeated reduction of HAuCl4 , in the presence of cysteine as the chiral inducer and ascorbic acid as a reducing agent. From detailed electron microscopy analysis of the crystallographic structures, it is proposed that the dissymmetry results from the development of chiral facets in the form of protrusions (tilted ridges) on the initial nanorods, eventually leading to a twisted shape. The role of cysteine is attributed to assisting enantioselective facet evolution, which is supported by density functional theory simulations of the surface energies, modified upon adsorption of the chiral molecule. The development of R-type and S-type chiral structures (small facets, terraces, or kinks) would thus be non-equal, removing the mirror symmetry of the Au NR and in turn resulting in a markedly chiral morphology with high plasmonic optical activity.


Assuntos
Nanopartículas , Nanotubos , Cisteína/química , Rotação Ocular , Ouro/química , Nanotubos/química , Nanopartículas/química
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