499 research outputs found
New materials for tunable plasmonic colloidal nanocrystals
We present a review on the emerging materials for novel plasmonic colloidal nanocrystals. We start by explaining the basic processes involved in surface plasmon resonances in nanoparticles and then discuss the classes of nanocrystals that to date are particularly promising for tunable plasmonics: non-stoichiometric copper chalcogenides, extrinsically doped metal oxides, oxygen-deficient metal oxides and conductive metal oxides. We additionally introduce other emerging types of plasmonic nanocrystals and finally we give an outlook on nanocrystals of materials that could potentially display interesting plasmonic properties
Plasmonic Doped Semiconductor Nanocrystals: Properties, Fabrication, Applications and Perspectives
Degenerately doped semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) are of recent interest to
the NC community due to their tunable localized surface plasmon resonances
(LSPRs) in the near infrared (NIR). The high level of doping in such materials
with carrier densities in the range of 1021 cm^-3 leads to degeneracy of the
doping levels and intense plasmonic absorption in the NIR. The lower carrier
density in degenerately doped semiconductor NCs compared to noble metals
enables LSPR tuning over a wide spectral range, since even a minor change of
the carrier density strongly affects the spectral position of the LSPR. We
focus on copper chalcogenide NCs and impurity doped metal oxide NCs as the most
investigated alternatives to noble metals. We shed light on the structural
changes upon LSPR tuning in vacancy doped copper chalcogenide NCs and deliver a
picture for the fundamentally different mechanism of LSPR modification of
impurity doped metal oxide NCs. We review on the peculiar optical properties of
plasmonic degenerately doped NCs by highlighting the variety of different
optical measurements and optical modeling approaches. These findings are merged
in an exhaustive section on new and exciting applications based on the special
characteristics that plasmonic semiconductor NCs bring along.Comment: 97 pages, 33 figure
Spinning nanorods - active optical manipulation of semiconductor nanorods using polarised light
In this Letter we show how a single beam optical trap offers the means for
three-dimensional manipulation of semiconductor nanorods in solution.
Furthermore rotation of the direction of the electric field provides control
over the orientation of the nanorods, which is shown by polarisation analysis
of two photon induced fluorescence. Statistics over tens of trapped
agglomerates reveal a correlation between the measured degree of polarisation,
the trap stiffness and the intensity of the emitted light, confirming that we
are approaching the single particle limit.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Single-mode tunable laser emission in the single-exciton regime from colloidal nanocrystals
Whispering-gallery-mode resonators have been extensively used in conjunction with different materials for the development of a variety of photonic devices. Among the latter, hybrid structures, consisting of dielectric microspheres and colloidal core/shell semiconductor nanocrystals as gain media, have attracted interest for the development of microlasers and studies of cavity quantum electrodynamic effects. Here we demonstrate single-exciton, single-mode, spectrally tuned lasing from ensembles of optical antenna-designed, colloidal core/shell CdSe/CdS quantum rods deposited on silica microspheres. We obtain single-exciton emission by capitalizing on the band structure of the specific core/shell architecture that strongly localizes holes in the core, and the two-dimensional quantum confinement of electrons across the elongated shell. This creates a type-II conduction band alignment driven by coulombic repulsion that eliminates non-radiative multi-exciton Auger recombination processes, thereby inducing a large excitonābi-exciton energy shift. Their ultra-low thresholds and single-mode, single-exciton emission make these hybrid lasers appealing for various applications, including quantum information processing
First-principles modeling of unpassivated and surfactant-passivated bulk facets of wurtzite CdSe: a model system for studying the anisotropic growth of CdSe nanocrystals.
Equilibrium geometries, surface energies, and surfactant binding energies are calculated for selected bulk facets of wurtzite CdSe with a first-principles approach. Passivation of the surface Cd atoms with alkyl phosphonic acids or amines lowers the surface energy of all facets, except for the polar 0001 facet. On the nonpolar facets, the most stable configuration corresponds to full coverage of surface Cd atoms with surfactants, while on the polar 0001 facet it corresponds only to a partial coverage. In addition, the passivated surface energies of the nonpolar facets are in general lower than the passivated polar 0001 facet. Therefore, the polar facets are less stable and less efficiently passivated than the nonpolar facets, and this can rationalize the observed anisotropic growth mechanism of wurtzite nanocrystals in the presence of suitable surfactants
Synthesis and biological assay of GSH functionalized fluorescent quantum dots for staining Hydra vulgaris
Quantum dots (QDs) have been used extensively as fluorescent markers in several studies on living cells. Here, we report the synthesis of conjugates based on glutathione (GSH) and QDs (GSH-QDs) and we prove how these functionalized fluorescent probes can be used for staining a freshwater invertebrate called Hydra vulgaris. GSH is known to promote Hydra feeding response by inducing mouth opening. We demonstrate that GSH-QDs as well are able to elicit biological activity in such an animal, which results in the fluorescent staining of Hydra. GSH-QDs, once they reach the gastric region, are internalized by endodermal cells. The efficiency of GSH-QD internalization increases significantly when nanoparticles are coadministrated with free GSH. We also compared the behavior of bare QDs to that of GSH-QDs both in the presence and in the absence of free GSH. The conclusions from these series of experiments point to the presence of GSH binding proteins in the endodermal cell layer and uncover a novel role played by glutathione in this organism
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