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1.
Chem Rev ; 123(13): 8488-8529, 2023 Jul 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37279171

RESUMEN

Plasmonic gold nanoparticles have been used increasingly in solid-state systems because of their applicability in fabricating novel sensors, heterogeneous catalysts, metamaterials, and thermoplasmonic substrates. While bottom-up colloidal syntheses take advantage of the chemical environment to control size, shape, composition, surface chemistry, and crystallography of the nanostructures precisely, it can be challenging to assemble nanoparticles rationally from suspension onto solid supports or within devices. In this Review, we discuss a powerful recent synthetic methodology, bottom-up in situ substrate growth, which circumvents time-consuming batch presynthesis, ligand exchange, and self-assembly steps by applying wet-chemical synthesis to form morphologically controlled nanostructures on supporting materials. First, we briefly introduce the properties of plasmonic nanostructures. Then we comprehensively summarize recent work that adds to the synthetic understanding of in situ geometrical and spatial control (patterning). Next, we briefly discuss applications of plasmonic hybrid materials prepared by in situ growth. Overall, despite the vast potential advantages of in situ growth, the mechanistic understanding of these methodologies remains far from established, providing opportunities and challenges for future research.

2.
ACS Appl Nano Mater ; 6(8): 6454-6460, 2023 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37152920

RESUMEN

We developed an unconventional seed-mediated in situ synthetic method, whereby gold nanostars are formed directly on the internal walls of microfluidic reactors. The dense plasmonic substrate coatings were grown in microfluidic channels with different geometries to elucidate the impacts of flow rate and profile on reagent consumption, product morphology, and density. Nanostar growth was found to occur in the flow-limited regime and our results highlight the possibility of creating shape gradients or incorporating multiple morphologies in the same microreactor, which is challenging to achieve with traditional self-assembly. The plasmonic-microfluidic platforms developed herein have implications for a broad range of applications, including cell culture/sorting, catalysis, sensing, and drug/gene delivery.

3.
Chem Rev ; 123(7): 3493-3542, 2023 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36948214

RESUMEN

The pseudo-two-dimensional (2D) morphology of plate-like metal nanoparticles makes them one of the most anisotropic, mechanistically understood, and tunable structures available. Although well-known for their superior plasmonic properties, recent progress in the 2D growth of various other materials has led to an increasingly diverse family of plate-like metal nanoparticles, giving rise to numerous appealing properties and applications. In this review, we summarize recent progress on the solution-phase growth of colloidal plate-like metal nanoparticles, including plasmonic and other metals, with an emphasis on mechanistic insights for different synthetic strategies, the crystallographic habits of different metals, and the use of nanoplates as scaffolds for the synthesis of other derivative structures. We additionally highlight representative self-assembly techniques and provide a brief overview on the attractive properties and unique versatility benefiting from the 2D morphology. Finally, we share our opinions on the existing challenges and future perspectives for plate-like metal nanomaterials.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(13): e202217614, 2023 Mar 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36622357

RESUMEN

The rational design of functional plasmonic metasurfaces and metamaterials requires the development of high-throughput characterization techniques compatible with operando conditions and capable of addressing single-nanostructures. In their work, Wei et al. demonstrate the use of electrochemiluminescence microscopy to investigate the mechanism behind plasmon-enhanced luminescence induced by gold nanostructures. The use of gold plasmonic arrays was exploited to achieve the rapid spectroscopic evaluation of all the individual nanostructures, and the correlation of the results with high- resolution electron microscopy analysis, guaranteeing a strict one-to-one correspondence. The authors were able to identify two different mechanisms for the enhancement of [Ru(bpy)3 ]2+ -tri-n-propylamine electrochemiluminescence mediated by single gold nanoparticles and by small plasmonic clusters. In the future, the proposed characterization could be used for the rapid and in situ spectroscopic analysis of more complex plasmonic nanostructures and metasurfaces.

5.
Adv Mater ; 34(37): e2205330, 2022 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35903851

RESUMEN

Precise arrangements of plasmonic nanoparticles on substrates are important for designing optoelectronics, sensors and metamaterials with rational electronic, optical and magnetic properties. Bottom-up synthesis offers unmatched control over morphology and optical response of individual plasmonic building blocks. Usually, the incorporation of nanoparticles made by bottom-up wet chemistry starts from batch synthesis of colloids, which requires time-consuming and hard-to-scale steps like ligand exchange and self-assembly. Herein, an unconventional bottom-up wet-chemical synthetic approach for producing gold nanoparticle ordered arrays is developed. Water-processable hydroxypropyl cellulose stencils facilitate the patterning of a reductant chemical ink on which nanoparticle growth selectively occurs. Arrays exhibiting lattice plasmon resonances in the visible region and near infrared (quality factors of >20) are produced following a rapid synthetic step (<10 min), all without cleanroom fabrication, specialized equipment, or self-assembly, constituting a major step forward in establishing in situ growth approaches. Further, the technical capabilities of this method through modulation of the particle size, shape, and array spacings directly on the substrate are demonstrated. Ultimately, establishing a fundamental understanding of in situ growth has the potential to inform the fabrication of plasmonic materials; opening the door for in situ growth fabrication of waveguides, lasing platforms, and plasmonic sensors.

6.
ACS Nano ; 15(12): 18600-18607, 2021 12 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34866398

RESUMEN

Anisotropic plasmonic nanoparticles have found applications in a wide range of scientific and technological fields, including medicine, energy storage and production, ultrasensitive sensing, catalysis, and photonics. These colloids owe their all-around success in such different scenarios to the development of rapid, scalable, and rational synthetic schemes. Gold nanotriangles (AuNTs), geometrically termed truncated triangular bipyramids, have attracted the attention of the scientific community because of their combination of well-defined crystallography, anisotropic plasmon spatial distribution, sharp tips that favor the generation of high electric fields, atomically flat surfaces, and a wide spectral tunability within the visible and infrared ranges combined with narrow bandwidths of their plasmon resonances. In this context, we previously reported a procedure for the production of AuNTs, based on a seed-mediated approach that guarantees batch-to-batch reproducibility in both size (within 5 nm in edge-length) and extinction spectra (down to 1 nm precision). The protocol involves numerous synthetic steps, and reproducibility requires awareness and familiarity with several details, which are usually learned through practice and repetition and may not always be intuitive on the basis of standard experimental protocols. We provide herein an enhanced protocol with full details and demonstration videos, which we expect will further foster the utilization of this fascinating type of anisotropic nanomaterials by researchers who are less experienced in the preparation and handling of gold colloids.


Asunto(s)
Nanopartículas del Metal , Nanoestructuras , Coloides , Oro , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
7.
ACS Mater Lett ; 3(3): 282-289, 2021 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34337418

RESUMEN

Micro- and nanoscale patterned monolayers of plasmonic nanoparticles were fabricated by combining concepts from colloidal chemistry, self-assembly, and subtractive soft lithography. Leveraging chemical interactions between the capping ligands of pre-synthesized gold colloids and a polydimethylsiloxane stamp, we demonstrated patterning gold nanoparticles over centimeter-scale areas with a variety of micro- and nanoscale geometries, including islands, lines, and chiral structures (e.g., square spirals). By successfully achieving nanoscale manipulation over a wide range of substrates and patterns, we establish a powerful and straightforward strategy, nanoparticle chemical lift-off lithography (NP-CLL), for the economical and scalable fabrication of functional plasmonic materials with colloidal nanoparticles as building blocks, offering a transformative solution for designing next-generation plasmonic technologies.

8.
J Chem Educ ; 98(2): 546-552, 2021 Feb 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34024937

RESUMEN

Gold nanoparticles are exciting materials in nanotechnology and nanoscience research and are being applied across a wide range of fields including imaging, chemical sensing, energy storage, and cancer therapies. In this experiment, students will synthesize two sizes of gold nanospheres (~20 nm and ~100 nm) and will create gold nanostars utilizing a seed-mediated growth synthetic approach. Students will compare how each sample interacts differently with light (absorption and scattering) based on the nanoparticles' size and shape. This experiment is ideal for high-school and early undergraduate students since all reagents are non-toxic, affordable, and no special characterization equipment is required.

9.
Nano Lett ; 21(6): 2444-2452, 2021 03 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33651617

RESUMEN

Silver, king among plasmonic materials, features low inelastic absorption in the visible-infrared (vis-IR) spectral region compared to other metals. In contrast, copper is commonly regarded as too lossy for actual applications. Here, we demonstrate vis-IR plasmons with quality factors >60 in long copper nanowires (NWs), as determined by electron energy-loss spectroscopy. We explain this result by noticing that most of the electromagnetic energy in these plasmons lies outside the metal, thus becoming less sensitive to inelastic absorption. Measurements for silver and copper NWs of different diameters allow us to elucidate the relative importance of radiative and nonradiative losses in plasmons spanning a wide spectral range down to <20 meV. Thermal population of such low-energy modes becomes significant and generates electron energy gains associated with plasmon absorption, rendering an experimental determination of the NW temperature. Copper is therefore emerging as an attractive, cheap, abundant material platform for high-quality plasmonics in elongated nanostructures.

10.
ACS Cent Sci ; 6(11): 2105-2116, 2020 Nov 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33274287

RESUMEN

Gold nanostars (AuNSTs) are biocompatible, have large surface areas, and are characterized by high near-infrared extinction, making them ideal for integration with technologies targeting biological applications. We have developed a robust and simple microfluidic method for the direct growth of anisotropic AuNSTs on oxide substrates including indium tin oxide and glass. The synthesis was optimized to yield AuNSTs with high anisotropy, branching, uniformity, and density in batch and microfluidic systems for optimal light-to-heat conversion upon laser irradiation. Surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectra and mesoscale temperature measurements were combined with spatially correlated scanning electron microscopy to monitor nanostar and ligand stability and microbubble formation at different laser fluences. The capability of the platform for generating controlled localized heating was used to explore hyperthermia-assisted detachment of adherent glioblastoma cells (U87-GFP) grafted to the capillary walls. Both flow and laser fluence can be tuned to induce different biological responses, such as ablation, cell deformation, release of intracellular components, and the removal of intact cells. Ultimately, this platform has potential applications in biological and chemical sensing, hyperthermia-mediated drug delivery, and microfluidic soft-release of grafted cells with single-cell specificity.

11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(20): 10976-10982, 2020 05 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32358194

RESUMEN

Advances in gene editing are leading to new medical interventions where patients' own cells are used for stem cell therapies and immunotherapies. One of the key limitations to translating these treatments to the clinic is the need for scalable technologies for engineering cells efficiently and safely. Toward this goal, microfluidic strategies to induce membrane pores and permeability have emerged as promising techniques to deliver biomolecular cargo into cells. As these technologies continue to mature, there is a need to achieve efficient, safe, nontoxic, fast, and economical processing of clinically relevant cell types. We demonstrate an acoustofluidic sonoporation method to deliver plasmids to immortalized and primary human cell types, based on pore formation and permeabilization of cell membranes with acoustic waves. This acoustofluidic-mediated approach achieves fast and efficient intracellular delivery of an enhanced green fluorescent protein-expressing plasmid to cells at a scalable throughput of 200,000 cells/min in a single channel. Analyses of intracellular delivery and nuclear membrane rupture revealed mechanisms underlying acoustofluidic delivery and successful gene expression. Our studies show that acoustofluidic technologies are promising platforms for gene delivery and a useful tool for investigating membrane repair.


Asunto(s)
Técnicas de Transferencia de Gen , Terapia Genética/métodos , Trasplante de Células Madre Hematopoyéticas/métodos , Sistema Hematopoyético , Células Madre , Supervivencia Celular , Citoplasma , Expresión Génica , Técnicas de Transferencia de Gen/instrumentación , Terapia Genética/instrumentación , Proteínas Fluorescentes Verdes/genética , Humanos , Células Jurkat , Plásmidos , Sonido
12.
Nano Lett ; 20(5): 2973-2979, 2020 May 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31967839

RESUMEN

Atomic vibrations and phonons are an excellent source of information on nanomaterials that we can access through a variety of methods including Raman scattering, infrared spectroscopy, and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS). In the presence of a plasmon local field, vibrations are strongly modified and, in particular, their dipolar strengths are highly enhanced, thus rendering Raman scattering and infrared spectroscopy extremely sensitive techniques. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that the interaction between a relativistic electron and vibrational modes in nanostructures is fundamentally modified in the presence of plasmons. We finely tune the energy of surface plasmons in metallic nanowires in the vicinity of hexagonal boron nitride, making it possible to monitor and disentangle both strong phonon-plasmon coupling and plasmon-driven phonon enhancement at the nanometer scale. Because of the near-field character of the electron beam-phonon interaction, optically inactive phonon modes are also observed. Besides increasing our understanding of phonon physics, our results hold great potential for investigating sensing mechanisms and chemistry in complex nanomaterials down to the molecular level.

13.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(3): 670-677, 2020 Feb 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31905285

RESUMEN

The irradiation of spherical gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) with nanosecond laser pulses induces shape transformations yielding nanocrystals with an inner cavity. The concentration of the stabilizing surfactant, the use of moderate pulse fluences, and the size of the irradiated AuNPs determine the efficiency of the process and the nature of the void. Hollow nanocrystals are obtained when molecules from the surrounding medium (e.g., water and organic matter derived from the surfactant) are trapped during laser pulse irradiation. These experimental observations suggest the existence of a subtle balance between the heating and cooling processes experienced by the nanocrystals, which induce their expansion and subsequent recrystallization keeping exogenous matter inside. The described approach provides valuable insight into the mechanism of interaction of a pulsed nanosecond laser with AuNPs, along with interesting prospects for the development of hollow plasmonic nanoparticles with potential applications related to gas and liquid storage at the nanoscale.

14.
J Chem Phys ; 151(14): 144712, 2019 Oct 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31615232

RESUMEN

Electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) is a promising technique for low concentration molecular detection. To improve the detection limit, plasmonic nanoparticles have been proposed as signal boosting antennas to amplify ECL. Previous ensemble studies have hinted that spectral overlap between the nanoparticle antenna and the ECL emitter may play a role in signal enhancement. Ensemble spectroscopy, however, cannot resolve heterogeneities arising from colloidal nanoparticle size and shape distributions, leading to an incomplete picture of the impact of spectral overlap. Here, we isolate the effect of nanoparticle-emitter spectral overlap for a model ECL system, coreaction of tris(2,2'-bipyridyl)dichlororuthenium(ii) hexahydrate and tripropylamine, at the single-particle level while minimizing other factors influencing ECL intensities. We found a 10-fold enhancement of ECL among 952 gold nanoparticles. This signal enhancement is attributed exclusively to spectral overlap between the nanoparticle and the emitter. Our study provides new mechanistic insight into plasmonic enhancement of ECL, creating opportunities for low concentration ECL sensing.


Asunto(s)
Nanopartículas del Metal/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Propilaminas/química , Técnicas Electroquímicas/instrumentación , Técnicas Electroquímicas/métodos , Electrodos , Oro/química , Oro/efectos de la radiación , Luz , Luminiscencia , Mediciones Luminiscentes/métodos , Nanopartículas del Metal/efectos de la radiación , Compuestos Organometálicos/efectos de la radiación
15.
ChemistryOpen ; 8(6): 705-711, 2019 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31205847

RESUMEN

We report an efficient, seed-mediated method for the synthesis of gold nanotriangles (NTs) which can be used for controlled self-assembly. The main advantage of the proposed synthetic protocol is that it relies on using stable (over the course of several days) intermediate seeds. This stability translates into increasing time efficiency of the synthesis and makes the protocol experimentally less demanding ('fast addition' not required, tap water can be used in the final steps) as compared to previously reported procedures, without compromising the size and shape monodispersity of the product. We demonstrate high reproducibility of the protocol in the hands of different researchers and in different laboratories. Additionally, this modified seed-mediated method can be used to produce NTs with edge lengths between ca. 45 and 150 nm. Finally, the high 'quality' of NTs allows the preparation of long-range ordered assemblies with vertically oriented building blocks, which makes them promising candidates for future optoelectronic technologies.

16.
Small ; 15(31): e1900982, 2019 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31183956

RESUMEN

Strong spatial confinement and highly reduced dielectric screening provide monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides with strong many-body effects, thereby possessing optically forbidden excitonic states (i.e., dark excitons) at room temperature. Herein, the interaction of surface plasmons with dark excitons in hybrid systems consisting of stacked gold nanotriangles and monolayer WS2 is explored. A narrow Fano resonance is observed when the hybrid system is surrounded by water, and the narrowing of the spectral Fano linewidth is attributed to the plasmon-enhanced decay of dark K-K excitons. These results reveal that dark excitons in monolayer WS2 can strongly modify Fano resonances in hybrid plasmon-exciton systems and can be harnessed for novel optical sensors and active nanophotonic devices.

17.
Nat Photonics ; 12(4): 195-201, 2018 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29785202

RESUMEN

Optical manipulation of plasmonic nanoparticles provides opportunities for fundamental and technical innovation in nanophotonics. Optical heating arising from the photon-to-phonon conversion is considered as an intrinsic loss in metal nanoparticles, which limits their applications. We show here that this drawback can be turned into an advantage, by developing an extremely low-power optical tweezing technique, termed opto-thermoelectric nanotweezers (OTENT). Through optically heating a thermoplasmonic substrate, alight-directed thermoelectric field can be generated due to spatial separation of dissolved ions within the heating laser spot, which allows us to manipulate metal nanoparticles of a wide range of materials, sizes and shapes with single-particle resolution. In combination with dark-field optical imaging, nanoparticles can be selectively trapped and their spectroscopic response can be resolved in-situ. With its simple optics, versatile low-power operation, applicability to diverse nanoparticles, and tuneable working wavelength, OTENT will become a powerful tool in colloid science and nanotechnology.

18.
Adv Mater ; 30(22): e1705779, 2018 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29659088

RESUMEN

Tunable Fano resonances and plasmon-exciton coupling are demonstrated at room temperature in hybrid systems consisting of single plasmonic nanoparticles deposited on top of the transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers. By using single Au nanotriangles (AuNTs) on monolayer WS2 as model systems, Fano resonances are observed from the interference between a discrete exciton band of monolayer WS2 and a broadband plasmonic mode of single AuNTs. The Fano lineshape depends on the exciton binding energy and the localized surface plasmon resonance strength, which can be tuned by the dielectric constant of surrounding solvents and AuNT size, respectively. Moreover, a transition from weak to strong plasmon-exciton coupling with Rabi splitting energies of 100-340 meV is observed by rationally changing the surrounding solvents. With their tunable plasmon-exciton interactions, the proposed WS2 -AuNT hybrids can open new pathways to develop active nanophotonic devices.

19.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(82): 11360-11363, 2017 Oct 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28971189

RESUMEN

Oxidative etching was used to produce gold seeds of different sizes and crystal habits. Following detailed characterization, the seeds were grown under different conditions. Our results bring new insights toward understanding the effect of size and crystallinity on the growth of anisotropic particles, whilst identifying guidelines for the optimisation of new synthetic protocols of predesigned seeds.

20.
Nanoscale ; 9(37): 13947-13955, 2017 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28782790

RESUMEN

Resonance energy transfer (RET) from plasmonic metal nanoparticles (NPs) to two-dimensional (2D) materials enhances the performance of 2D optoelectronic devices and sensors. Herein, single-NP scattering spectroscopy is employed to investigate plasmon-trion and plasmon-exciton RET from single Au nanotriangles (AuNTs) to monolayer MoS2, at room temperature. The large quantum confinement and reduced dielectric screening in monolayer MoS2 facilitates efficient RET between single plasmonic metal NPs and the monolayer. Because of the large exciton binding energy of monolayer MoS2, charged excitons (i.e., trions) are observed at room temperature, which enable us to study the plasmon-trion interactions under ambient conditions. Tuning of plasmon-trion and plasmon-exciton RET is further achieved by controlling the dielectric constant of the medium surrounding the AuNT-MoS2 hybrids. Our observation of switchable plasmon-trion and plasmon-exciton RET inspires new applications of the hybrids of 2D materials and metal nanoparticles.

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