Temperature-Dependent Plasmonic Responses from Gold
Nanoparticle Dimers Linked by Double-Stranded DNA
Posted on 2018-08-03 - 00:00
DNA
is a powerful tool to assemble gold nanoparticles into discrete
structures with tunable plasmonic properties for photonic or biomedical
applications. Because of their photothermal properties or their use
in biological media, these nanostructures can experience drastic modifications
of the local temperature that can affect their morphology and, therefore,
their optical responses. Using single-nanostructure spectroscopy,
we demonstrate that, even with a fully stable DNA linker, gold particle
dimers can undergo substantial conformational changes at temperatures
larger than 50 °C and aggregate irreversibly. Such temperature-dependent
resonant optical properties could find applications in imaging and
in the design of nonlinear photothermal sources. Inversely, to provide
fully stable DNA-templated plasmonic nanostructures at biologically
relevant temperatures, we show how passivating the gold nanoparticles
using amphiphilic surface chemistries renders the longitudinal plasmon
resonance of gold particle dimers nearly independent of the local
temperature.
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Lermusiaux, Laurent; Bidault, Sébastien (2018). Temperature-Dependent Plasmonic Responses from Gold
Nanoparticle Dimers Linked by Double-Stranded DNA. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b00133