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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 630(Pt B): 924-933, 2023 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36370643

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: Due to their unique quantum yield and photostability performances, quantum nanoplatelets are very promising building blocks for future generations of displays. The directed assembly of such colloidal nano-objects in the shape of micro-pixels is thus the next mandatory step to reach this goal. Selectively trapping them on electrostatically charged patterns by nanoxerography could be a versatile and appealing strategy but requires a full understanding of the assembly mechanisms in order to make the most of their integration. EXPERIMENTS: We propose an experimental platform based on a smart resealable microfluidic chip coupled to an inverted optical fluorescence microscope and a high-speed camera for in situ access of such assembly mechanisms, using CdSe/CdZnS quantum nanoplatelets as model nano-objects. The photoluminescence signal of the nanoplatelet patterns is thus recorded in real time during their assembly and data extracted after image processing. FINDINGS: The coupling of experimental results and numerical simulations evidences the main role of advection at the origin of this directed nanoparticle trapping. Deep understanding of the involved mechanisms and tuning of experimental parameters allow to make high resolution quantum nanoplatelet based micro-pixels with a fine control of their lateral and vertical dimensions.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 20(24): 3354-3365, 2019 12 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31647175

ABSTRACT

Dielectrophoresis can move small particles using the force resulting from their polarization in a divergent electric field. In liquids, it has most often been applied to micrometric objects such as biological cells or latex microspheres. For smaller particles, the dielectrophoretic force becomes very small and the phenomenon is furthermore perturbed by Brownian motion. Whereas dielectrophoresis has been used for assembly of superstructures of nanoparticles and for the detection of proteins and nucleic acids, the mechanisms underlying DEP of such small objects require further study. This work presents measurements of the alternating-current (AC) dielectrophoretic response of gold nanoparticles of less than 200 nm diameter in water. An original dark-field digital video-microscopic method was developed and used in combination with a microfluidic device containing transparent thin-film electrodes. It was found that the dielectrophoretic force is only effective in a small zone very close to the tip of the electrodes, and that Brownian motion actually facilitates transport of particles towards this zone. Moreover, the fact that particles as small as 80 nm are still efficiently captured in our device is not only due to Brownian transport but also to an effective polarizability that is larger than what would be expected on basis of current theory for a sphere in a dielectric medium.

3.
Nanoscale ; 8(12): 6555-70, 2016 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26935710

ABSTRACT

Absolute extinction and scattering cross sections for gold nanoparticle dimers were determined experimentally using a chemometric approach involving singular-value decomposition of the extinction and scattering spectra of slowly aggregating gold nanospheres in aqueous suspension. Quantitative spectroscopic data on plasmonic nanoparticle assemblies in liquid suspension are rare, in particular for particles larger than 40 nm, and in this work we demonstrate how such data can be obtained directly from the aggregating suspension. Our method can analyse, non invasively, the evolution of several sub-populations of nanoparticle assemblies. It may be applied to other self-assembling nanoparticle systems with an evolving optical response. The colloidal systems studied here are based on 20, 50 and 80 nm gold nanospheres in aqueous solutions containing sodium lipoate. In these systems, the reversible dimerisation process can be controlled using pH and ionic strength, and this control is rationalised in terms of DLVO theory. The dimers were identified in suspension by their translational and rotational diffusion through scattering correlation spectroscopy. Moreover, their gigadalton molecular weight was measured using electrospray charge-detection mass spectrometry, demonstrating that mass spectrometry can be used to study nanoparticles assemblies of very high molecular mass. The extinction and scattering cross sections calculated in the discrete-dipole approximation (DDA) agree very well with those obtained experimentally using our approach.


Subject(s)
Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Optics and Photonics , Buffers , Colloids/chemistry , Dimerization , Gold/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Light , Mass Spectrometry , Nanospheres/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Osmolar Concentration , Particle Size , Scattering, Radiation , Spectrophotometry , Suspensions , Temperature , Thioctic Acid/chemistry , Water/chemistry
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