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Andrew van Bommel February 28th, 2006
Gold Nanocages: Engineering Their Structure for Biomedical Appications Xia et al., University of Washington Andrew van Bommel February 28th, 2006
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Introduction For biomedical applications, the body is highly transparent to near-IR light, nm Sperical Au particles show extinction at nm Au particles can be shifted to the near-IR region: Aggregation of spherical Au nanoparticles Elongation of Au nanoparticles into nanorods Emptying the interiors of spherical nanoparticles to form hollow nanostructures Note: extinction = scattering + absorption
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Blue-Shift Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR)- free electrons in the Au nanoparticles collectively oscillate and scatter/absorb the incident electromagnetic wave A composite spherical particle consisting of a metallic shell and a dielectric core could give rise to SPR modes with their wavelengths variable over a broad range
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Synthesis of Ag nanocubes
AgNO3 is reduced by ethylene glycol- nanocrystal seeds More Ag atoms are added to the seeds as AgNO3 is constantly reduced Cubes: Preferential addition to {111} Sharp corners produces
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Conversion into Au nanocages
HAuCl4 reduced by Ag nanostructures: 3Ag + AuCl- Au + 3Ag+ + 4Cl- Au atoms evolve a thin shell around each Ag nanocube template By controlling the concentration of reagents, hollow Au nanocages can be obtained with controlled dimensions
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Mechanism i) Initiation of replacement by selective pitting of the Ag nanocubes ii) Formation of nanobox made of a Au/Ag alloy iii)Generation of pores through a dealloying process (Ag selectively oxidized) iv) Ag nanotube template is dissolved
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Optical Characterization
UV-vis-NIR spectra: increasing the amount of HAuCl4: Peak broadening due to variations in wall thickness
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Applications Photothermal effect- selective attachment to cancer cells with localized heating Can add functionalities to target cancer cells for photothermal therapy or diagnosis
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