10 research outputs found
Interface Engineering of Water-Dispersible Near-Infrared-Emitting CuInZnS/ZnSe/ZnS Quantum Dots
© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, to view a copy of the license, see: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/We report the synthesis of near-infrared (IR)-emitting core/shell/shell quantum dots of CuInZnS/ZnSe/ZnS and their phase transfer to water. The intermediate ZnSe shell was added to inhibit the migration of ions from the standard ZnS shell into the emitting core, which often leads to a blue shift in the emission profile. By engineering the interface between the core and terminal shell layer, the optical properties can be controlled, and emission was maintained in the near-IR region, making the materials attractive for biological applications. In addition, the hydrodynamic diameter of the particle was controlled using amphiphilic polymers.Peer reviewe
An atom efficient, single-source precursor route to plasmonic CuS nanocrystals
The synthesis of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) from single-source precursors offers simplified manufacturing processes at the cost of reduced atom efficiency. Self-capping routes have the potential to maximise this efficiency although investigation has so far been limited to organic solvents. Here we present the synthesis of copper sulfide NCs via the decomposition of a copper dithiocarbamate complex in water. Nanocrystalline covellite particles were prepared without the need for additional capping ligand and exhibited a hollow nanosphere morphology. Mass spectrometry of the water-stable NCs indicated the presence of a number of surface ligands, including a small amine fragment of the single-source precursor (SSP) complex. A broad plasmon resonance in the near-infrared (NIR) at 990 nm was also observed and the photothermal effect of this demonstrated. Cytotoxicity experiments indicated cell viability remained above 95% for NC concentrations up to 1 mg mL(−1), indicating high biocompatibility
Cellular imaging using emission-tuneable conjugated polymer nanoparticles
New materials that exhibit tuneable optical properties, notable emission across the visible spectrum, are of immense interest to biologists as they present a broad palette of colours from a single imaging agent that can be utilised in biological detection. Such a flexible system, when combined with the advantages of using conjugated polymer nanoparticles in cell imaging results in a widely useful medical diagnostic system. Here, we describe tuneable emission observed through oxidation of a conjugated polymer followed by the formation of nanoparticles and their subsequent use in cell imaging
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Interface Engineering of Water-Dispersible Near-Infrared-Emitting CuInZnS/ZnSe/ZnS Quantum Dots.
We report the synthesis of near-infrared (IR)-emitting core/shell/shell quantum dots of CuInZnS/ZnSe/ZnS and their phase transfer to water. The intermediate ZnSe shell was added to inhibit the migration of ions from the standard ZnS shell into the emitting core, which often leads to a blue shift in the emission profile. By engineering the interface between the core and terminal shell layer, the optical properties can be controlled, and emission was maintained in the near-IR region, making the materials attractive for biological applications. In addition, the hydrodynamic diameter of the particle was controlled using amphiphilic polymers
Post-polymerization C–H Borylation of Donor–Acceptor Materials Gives Highly Efficient Solid State Near-Infrared Emitters for Near-IR-OLEDs and Effective Biological Imaging
Post-polymerization
modification of the donor–acceptor polymer, polyÂ(9,9-dioctylfluorene-<i>alt</i>-benzothiadiazole), PF8-BT, by electrophilic C–H
borylation is a simple method to introduce controllable quantities
of near-infrared (near-IR) emitting chromophore units into the backbone
of a conjugated polymer. The highly stable borylated unit possesses
a significantly lower LUMO energy than the pristine polymer resulting
in a reduction in the band gap of the polymer by up to 0.63 eV and
a red shift in emission of more than 150 nm. Extensively borylated
polymers absorb strongly in the deep red/near-IR and are highly emissive
in the near-IR region of the spectrum in solution and solid state.
Photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) values are extremely high in
the solid state for materials with emission maxima ≥ 700 nm
with PLQY values of 44% at 700 nm and 11% at 757 nm for PF8-BT with
different borylation levels. This high brightness enables efficient
solution processed near-IR emitting OLEDs to be fabricated and highly
emissive borylated polymer loaded conjugated polymer nanoparticles
(CPNPs) to be prepared. The latter are bright, photostable, low toxicity
bioimaging agents that in phantom mouse studies show higher signal
to background ratios for emission at 820 nm than the ubiquitous near-IR
emissive bioimaging agent indocyanine green. This methodology represents
a general approach for the post-polymerization functionalization of
donor–acceptor polymers to reduce the band gap as confirmed
by the C–H borylation of polyÂ((9,9-dioctylfluorene)-2,7-diyl-<i>alt</i>-[4,7-bisÂ(3-hexylthien-5-yl)-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole]-2<i>c</i>,2<i>cc</i>-diyl) (PF8TBT) resulting in a red
shift in emission of >150 nm, thereby shifting the emission maximum
to 810 nm
Biocompatible magnetic conjugated polymer nanoparticles for optical and lifetime imaging applications in the first biological window
[Image: see text] Conjugated polymers are organic semiconductors that can be used for fluorescence microscopy of living specimens. Here, we report the encapsulation of the bright-red-emitting conjugated polymer, poly[{9,9-dihexyl-2,7-bis(1-cyanovinylene)fluorenylene}-alt-co-{2,5-bis(N,N′-diphenylamino)-1,4-phenylene}] (CN-FO-DPD), and superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) within poly(styrene-co-maleic anhydride) (PSMA) micelles. The resulting particles exhibited an emission peak at 657 nm, a fluorescence quantum yield of 21%, an average diameter of 65 nm, and a ζ potential of −30 mV. They are taken up by cells, and we describe their use in fluorescence microscopy of living Hela cells and zebrafish embryos and their associated cytotoxicity in HEK, HeLa, and HCE cells
Theranostic NIR-active Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles
© 2021 American Chemical Society. This is the accepted manuscript version of an article which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c01257Conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNs) based on a common solar cell material (PTB7) have been prepared, and their potential in theranostic applications based on bioimaging and photosensitizing capabilities has been evaluated. The main absorption and emission bands of the prepared CPN particles both fell within the NIR-I (650-950 nm) transparency window, allowing facile and efficient implementation of our CPNs as bioimaging agents, as demonstrated in this work for A549 human lung cancer cell cultures. The prepared CPN samples were also shown to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) upon photoexcitation in the near infrared or ultraviolet spectral regions, both in aqueous solutions and in HaCaT keratinocyte cell cultures. Importantly, we show that the photosensitizing ability of our CPNs was largely determined by the nature of the stabilizing shell: coating the CPNs with a pluronic F127 copolymer led to an improvement of photoinitiated ROS production, while using PSMA instead completely quenched said process. To best of our knowledge, this work is the first to demonstrate the modulation of the photosensitizing capability of CPNs via an appropriate selection of stabilizing material and one that opens a new gateway to the design of theranostic probes based on CPNs.Peer reviewe