English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

 
 
DownloadE-Mail

Released

Journal Article

Golden Plasmophores with Tunable Photoluminescence and Outstanding Thermal and Photothermal Stability

MPS-Authors
/persons/resource/persons136033

Kassier,  G.
Miller Group, Atomically Resolved Dynamics Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

External Resource
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Supplementary Material (public)

adom202302833-sup-0001-suppmat.pdf
(Supplementary material), 7MB

Citation

Gharib, M., Yates, A. J., Sanders, S., Gebauer, J., Graf, S., Ziefuß, A. R., et al. (2024). Golden Plasmophores with Tunable Photoluminescence and Outstanding Thermal and Photothermal Stability. Advanced Optical Materials, 12(14): 2302833. doi:10.1002/adom.202302833.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000E-9D86-A
Abstract
Among various hybrid nanomaterials, the combination of plasmonic nanoparticles and fluorophores in a single multifunctional nanoplatform, so-called plasmophores, has attracted significant attention in different fields such as dark field, fluorescence, and photoacoustic imaging, biosensing, photothermal, and photodynamic therapy. Herein, author report a facile and controlled synthesis route of hybrid nanoplatforms composed of fluorescent gold nanoclusters (GNCs) coupled to plasmonic gold nanorods (GNRs) using controlled silica (SiO2) dielectric spacers of different thicknesses from now on referred to as GNR@SiO2@GNC plasmophores. The results show different degrees of plasmon-enhanced fluorescence of the GNCs in their plasmophore hybrid system when placed at different distances from the plasmonic cores of the GNRs. On the other hand, these plasmophores show enhanced thermal stability compared to GNRs@CTAB (CTAB, cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide). This results also demonstrated that upon annealing at elevated temperatures (800–1000 °C), the GNRs in the plasmophores are more thermally stable and robust than the GNRs@CTAB. More surprisingly, despite the commonly reported very low melting temperature of smaller-size nanocrystals, the GNCs in the plasmophores showed high thermal stability and do not exhibit significant structural changes at elevated temperatures (800–1000 °C).