The photothermal effect in nanomaterials, resulting from resonant optical absorption, finds wide applications in biomedicine, cancer therapy, and microscopy. Despite its prevalence, the photothermal effect in light-absorbing nanoparticles has typically been assessed using bulk measurements, neglecting near-field effects. Beyond standard imaging and therapeutic uses, nanosecond-transient photothermal effects have been harnessed for bacterial inactivation, neural stimulation, drug delivery, and chemical synthesis. While scanning probe microscopy and electron microscopy offer single-particle imaging of photothermal fields, their slow speed limits observations to milliseconds or seconds, preventing nanoscale dynamic investigations. Here, we introduce decoupled optical force nanoscopy (Dofn), enabling nanometer-scale mapping of photothermal forces by exploiting unique phase responses to temporal modulation. We employ the photothermal effect’s back-action to distinguish various time frames within a modulation period. This allows us to capture the dynamic photothermal process of a single gold nanorod in the nanosecond range, providing insights into non-stationary thermal diffusion at the nanoscale.
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Abstract -
Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 12, 2024
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ConspectusGold nanoparticles (AuNPs) exhibit unique size- and shape-dependent properties not obtainable at the macroscale. Gold nanorods (AuNRs), with their morphology-dependent optical properties, ability to convert light to heat, and high surface-to-volume ratios, are of great interest for biosensing, medicine, and catalysis. While the gold core provides many fascinating properties, this Account focuses on AuNP soft surface coatings, which govern the interactions of nanoparticles with the local environments. Postmodification of AuNP surface chemistry can greatly alter NP colloidal stability, nano-bio interactions, and functionality. Polyelectrolyte coatings provide controllable surface-coating thickness and charge, which impact the composition of the acquired corona in biological settings. Covalent modification, in which covalently bound ligands replace the original capping layer, is often performed with thiols and disulfides due to their ability to replace native coatings. N-heterocyclic carbenes and looped peptides expand the possible functionalities of the ligand layer.The characterization of surface ligands bound to AuNPs, in terms of ligand density and dynamics, remains a challenge. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful tool for understanding molecular structures and dynamics. Our recent NMR work on AuNPs demonstrated that NMR data were obtainable for ligands on NPs with diameters up to 25 nm for the first time. This was facilitated by the strong proton NMR signals of the trimethylammonium headgroup, which are present in a distinct regime from other ligand protons’ signals. Ligand density analyses showed that the smallest AuNPs (below 4 nm) had the largest ligand densities, yet spin–spin T2 measurements revealed that these smallest NPs also had the most mobile ligand headgroups. Molecular dynamics simulations were able to reconcile these seemingly contradictory results.While NMR spectroscopy provides ligand information averaged over many NPs, the ligand distribution on individual particles’ surfaces must also be probed to fully understand the surface coating. Taking advantage of improvements in electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) detectors employed with scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), a single-layer graphene substrate was used to calibrate the carbon K-edge EELS signal, allowing quantitative imaging of the carbon atom densities on AuNRs with sub-nanometer spatial resolution. In collaboration with others, we revealed that the mean value for surfactant-bilayer-coated AuNRs had 10–30% reduced ligand density at the ends of the rods compared to the sides, confirming prior indirect evidence for spatially distinct ligand densities.Recent work has found that surface ligands on nanoparticles can, somewhat surprisingly, enhance the selectivity and efficiency of the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 by controlling access to the active site, tuning its electronic and chemical environment, or denying entry to impurities that poison the nanoparticle surface to facilitate reduction. Looking to the future, while NMR and EELS are powerful and complementary techniques for investigating surface coatings on AuNPs, the frontier of this field includes the development of methods to probe the surface ligands of individual NPs in a high-throughput manner, to monitor nano-bio interactions within complex matrices, and to study structure–property relationships of AuNPs in biological systems.more » « less
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Surface patterning of inorganic nanoparticles through site-selective functionalization with mixed-ligand shells or additional inorganic material is an intriguing approach to developing tailored nanomaterials with potentially novel and/or multifunctional properties. The unique physicochemical properties of such nanoparticles are likely to impact their behavior and functionality in biological environments, catalytic systems, and electronics applications, making it vital to understand how we can achieve and characterize such regioselective surface functionalization. This Feature Article will review methods by which chemists have selectively modified the surface of colloidal nanoparticles to obtain both two-sided Janus particles and nanoparticles with patchy or stripey mixed-ligand shells, as well as to achieve directed growth of mesoporous oxide materials and metals onto existing nanoparticle templates in a spatially and compositionally controlled manner. The advantages and drawbacks of various techniques used to characterize the regiospecificity of anisotropic surface coatings are discussed, as well as areas for improvement, and future directions for this field.more » « less
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Gold nanorods are well-known surface-enhanced Raman scattering substrates. Under longitudinal plasmonic excitation, the ends of the nanorods experience larger local electric fields compared to the sides of the rods, suggesting that Raman-active molecules would be best detected if the molecules could preferentially bind to the ends of the nanorods. Coating the tips of gold nanorods with anionic mesoporous silica caps enabled surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) detection of the cationic dye methylene blue at lower concentrations than observed for the corresponding silica coating of the entire rod. By analyzing the intensity ratio of two Raman active modes of methylene blue and the surface plasmon resonance peak shift of the gold nanorod composites, it can be inferred that at a low concentration of methylene blue, molecules adsorb to the tips of the tip coated silica gold nanorods. Functionalization of the anionic silica endcaps with cationic groups eliminates the SERS enhancement for the cationic methylene blue, demonstrating the electrostatic nature of the adsorption process in this case. These results show that anisotropic silica coatings can concentrate analytes at the tips of gold nanorods for improvements in chemical sensing and diagnostics.more » « less