[Home]
[Full version]
Controlling nano color and shape with pH adjustments
Jul 30 ,Nanotechnology
Scientists have recently discovered that the shape, color, and optical properties of silver nanoparticles can be controlled using a method that is easy, inexpensive and takes just minutes. Simply by adjusting the pH value of the nanoparticles’ immersion solution, silver nanoprisms can be transformed into nanodiscs, which can also enhance the unique light scattering properties of the particles for possible applications.
The chemists from Northeast Normal University in China, Ying Chen, Chungang Wang, Zhanfang Ma (also with Capital Normal University) and Zhongmin Su, have demonstrated their method in a recent issue of Nanotechnology. The group showed how a more acidic solution decreases the wavelength of the silver nanoparticles’ absorption peaks, which can improve the so-called “enhancement mechanism” of Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). The scientists hope that this work will help lead to the fabrication of nanoparticle films for biosensing.
“This work will be of great significance in understanding the mechanism of morphology transitions of nanostructures with the changes of the surrounding environment,” Ma told PhysOrg.com. “Also, this work will be important in fabricating biosensing or chemosensing nanostructure films with different shapes using a simple routine method.”
The scientists started with a batch of silver nanoparticles in the shape of prisms, with an average edge about 48 nm long, and appearing as a deep blue color under an atomic force microscope (AFM). When the scientists immersed the quartz substrate holding the nanoprisms into a solution with a pH of 5.0 for 5 minutes, the absorption peak shifted from about 800 to 500 nm, changing the color to deep purple. When immersed in a solution with a pH of 2.2, the absorption peak decreased to 432 nm, and turned yellow.
Besides the color change, the researchers were also surprised to find that the silver nanoprisms gradually changed into smaller nanodiscs as the pH decreased to below 6.0. The group attributes this shape change to the increased amount of hydrogen ions present in increasingly acidic solutions (pH is basically defined by the ratio of hydrogen ions, H, to hydroxide ions, OH, which is the breakdown of water).
Hydrogen ions can act as etchants, in essence carving away the sharp corners of the prisms, so much so that, eventually, the prisms become round discs. The lower the pH value, the stronger the etchant ability, and the more quickly the prisms become discs. The discs, with 35-nm diameters and 20-nm thicknesses, are also smaller than the prisms, resulting in a greater distance between the nanoparticles in a lower pH solution.
One of the many applications of controlling nano-sized color and shape, the scientists point out, is increasing the enhancement effects of SERS. SERS has been used in applications including materials analysis and amplification in telecommunications due to the ability to scatter light at different wavelengths than normal.
To enhance SERS, scientists can use nanoparticles, with their strong localized plasmon resonance, to amplify the localized electromagnetic field, which is called the electromagnetic effect. The ability to control the nanoparticles’ shapes allows researchers to achieve the particular excitation wavelength required to optimize this effect.
“Anistropic noble metal nanoparticulate substrates are better than spherical shaped nanoparticulate substrates for improving SERS enhancement,” Ma explained. “Our results will provide an easy route to fabricate the sensitive SERS substrate. This will be very useful not only for SERS biosensing applications—for example, protein and DNA detections—but also for chemosensing applications—for example, small chemical molecules detection.”
Citation: Chen, Ying, Wang, Chungang, Ma, Zhanfang, and Su, Zhongmin. “Controllable colours and shapes of silver nanostructures based on pH: application to surface-enhanced Raman scattering.” Nanotechnology 18 (2007) 325602 (5pp).
Copyright 2007 PhysOrg.com.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of PhysOrg.com.
Related stories:
Northwestern chemist investigates lost reds in Homer painting
More than 30 years ago, when Northwestern University chemist Richard Van Duyne developed a powerful new sensing technique, he never thought he would be using it to learn more about treasures in the Art Institute of Chicago's collection -- including a watercolor recently featured in the museum's exhibition "Watercolors by Winslow Homer: The Color of Light."
Researchers use laser, nanotechnology to rapidly detect viruses
Waiting a day or more to get lab results back from the doctor's office soon could become a thing of a past. Using nanotechnology, a team of University of Georgia researchers has developed a diagnostic test that can detect viruses as diverse as influenza, HIV and RSV in 60 seconds or less.
ORNL nanoprobe creates world of new possibilities
A technology with proven environmental, forensics and medical applications has received a shot in the arm because of an invention by researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
ORNL's nanoprobe, which is based on a light scattering technique, can detect and analyze chemicals, explosives, drugs and more at a theoretical single-molecule level. This capability makes it far more selective and accurate than conventional competing technologies.
Nanoparticles Provide Detailed View Inside Living Animals
Using nanoparticles designed specifically to produce a bright Raman spectroscopic signal, a team of investigators at the Center for Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence Focused on Therapy Response (Stanford CCNE) has shown that it can produce whole-body images in small animals that can reveal the location of tumors and track how these nanoparticles traffic through the body.
Scientists make breakthrough in single-molecule sensing
In a study that could lay the foundation for mass-produced single-molecule sensors, physicists and engineers at Rice University have demonstrated a means of simultaneously making optical and electronic measurements of the same molecule.
Gold Nanoparticles Shine Brightly in Tumors
Solid gold nanoparticles have long been used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and more recently have shown promise in treating various types of cancer. Now, thanks to work by Shuming Nie, Ph.D., and his colleagues at the Emory-Georgia Tech Nanotechnology Center for Personalized and Predictive Oncology, these same nanoparticles could serve as a powerful tumor-homing beacon for detecting microscopic tumors or even individual malignant cells. The researchers report their findings in the journal
Nature Biotechnology.
Rice University researchers create 'nanorice'
Who better to invent "nanorice" than researchers at Rice University? But marketing and whimsy weren't what motivated the team of engineers, physicists and chemists from Rice's Laboratory for Nanophotonics (LANP) to make rice-shaped particles of gold and iron oxide.
Photonic Crystal Fiber Nanosensors
Stevens Institute of Technology’s Dr. Henry Du and his research team have pioneered work on the
integration of photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) with nanoscale technologies that will potentially lead to robust chemical and biological sensing devices. The National Science Foundation recently granted Du’s team $1.3 million to pursue a multidisciplinary project in the area.
Using molecular and
nanoscale surface modification, state-of-the-art
laser techniques, and computer simulation, their research seeks to enhance the prospects of PCF sensors, sensor arrays, and sensor networks for diverse applications such as remote and dynamic environmental monitoring, manufacturing process safety, medical diagnosis, early warning of biological and chemical warfare, and homeland defense.
[Home]
[Full version]