2 research outputs found
Single-Particle Spectroscopic Study on Fluorescence Enhancement by Plasmon Coupled Gold Nanorod Dimers Assembled on DNA Origami
Metal-enhanced
fluorescence has attracted much attention due to
its scientific importance and lots of potential applications. Plasmon
coupled metal nanoparticles have been demonstrated to further improve
the enhancement effects. Conventional studies of metal-enhanced fluorescence
on the bulk systems are complicated by the ensemble average effects
over many critical factors with large variations. Here, fluorescence
enhancement of ATTO-655 by a plasmon coupled gold nanorod dimer fixed
on a DNA origami nanobreadboard was studied on the single-particle
level. A series of gold nanorod dimers with linear orientation and
different gap distances ranging from 6.1 to 26.0 nm were investigated
to explore the plasmon coupling effect on fluorescence enhancement.
The results show that the dimer with the smallest gap (6.1 nm) gives
the highest enhancement (470-fold), and the enhancement gradually
decreases as the gap distance increases and eventually approaches
that from a monomer (120-fold). This trend is consistent with the
numerical calculation results. This study indicates that plasmon coupling
in gold nanorod dimers offers further increased excitation efficiency
to achieve large fluorescence enhancement
Geometry-Dependent Plasmonic Tunability and Photothermal Characteristics of Multibranched Gold Nanoantennas
Plasmon resonances of anisotropic
multibranched nanostructures
are governed by their geometry, allowing morphology-directed selective
manipulation of the optical properties. In this work, we have synthesized
multibranched gold nanoantennas (MGNs) of variable geometry by a one-step
seedless approach using 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic
acid (HEPES) as a capping and reducing agent. This approach enables
us to modulate the MGNs’ geometry by controlling three different
parameters: concentration of HEPES, concentration of Au<sup>3+</sup>, and pH of HEPES buffer. By altering the MGNs morphology with minimal
increase in the overall dimensions, the plasmon resonances were tuned
from the visible to the near-infrared. The MGNs plasmon resonances
demonstrated a nonintuitive blue-shift when pH > p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub> of HEPES which we attributed to emergence of charge
transfer oscillations formed when MGNs cluster to dimers and trimers.
Further, due to the presence of multiple sharp protrusions, the MGNs
demonstrated a refractive index sensitivity of 373 nm/RIU, which is
relatively high for this class of branched nanostructures of similar
size. Finally, the sharp protrusions of MGNs also give rise to intense
photothermal efficiencies; ∼53 °C was achieved within
5 min of laser illumination, demonstrating the efficacy of MGNs in
therapeutic applications. By modulating the mass density of MGNs,
the laser flux, and time of illumination, we provide a detailed analysis
of the photothermal characteristics of MGNs