5 results on '"Gole AM"'
Search Results
2. Gold nanoparticles in biology: beyond toxicity to cellular imaging.
- Author
-
Murphy CJ, Gole AM, Stone JW, Sisco PN, Alkilany AM, Goldsmith EC, and Baxter SC
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Movement, Gold toxicity, Humans, Metal Nanoparticles toxicity, Scattering, Radiation, Gold chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry
- Abstract
Gold, enigmatically represented by the target-like design of its ancient alchemical symbol, has been considered a mystical material of great value for centuries. Nanoscale particles of gold now command a great deal of attention for biomedical applications. Depending on their size, shape, degree of aggregation, and local environment, gold nanoparticles can appear red, blue, or other colors. These visible colors reflect the underlying coherent oscillations of conduction-band electrons ("plasmons") upon irradiation with light of appropriate wavelengths. These plasmons underlie the intense absorption and elastic scattering of light, which in turn forms the basis for many biological sensing and imaging applications of gold nanoparticles. The brilliant elastic light-scattering properties of gold nanoparticles are sufficient to detect individual nanoparticles in a visible light microscope with approximately 10(2) nm spatial resolution. Despite the great excitement about the potential uses of gold nanoparticles for medical diagnostics, as tracers, and for other biological applications, researchers are increasingly aware that potential nanoparticle toxicity must be investigated before any in vivo applications of gold nanoparticles can move forward. In this Account, we illustrate the importance of surface chemistry and cell type for interpretation of nanoparticle cytotoxicity studies. We also describe a relatively unusual live cell application with gold nanorods. The light-scattering properties of gold nanoparticles, as imaged in dark-field optical microscopy, can be used to infer their positions in a living cell construct. Using this positional information, we can quantitatively measure the deformational mechanical fields associated with living cells as they push and pull on their local environment. The local mechanical environment experienced by cells is part of a complex feedback loop that influences cell metabolism, gene expression, and migration.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Chemical sensing and imaging with metallic nanorods.
- Author
-
Murphy CJ, Gole AM, Hunyadi SE, Stone JW, Sisco PN, Alkilany A, Kinard BE, and Hankins P
- Subjects
- Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Physical, Light, Metal Nanoparticles ultrastructure, Particle Size, Scattering, Radiation, Spectrum Analysis, Raman methods, Surface Plasmon Resonance methods, Surface Properties, Gold chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Silver chemistry
- Abstract
In this Feature Article, we examine recent advances in chemical analyte detection and optical imaging applications using gold and silver nanoparticles, with a primary focus on our own work. Noble metal nanoparticles have exciting physical and chemical properties that are entirely different from the bulk. For chemical sensing and imaging, the optical properties of metallic nanoparticles provide a wide range of opportunities, all of which ultimately arise from the collective oscillations of conduction band electrons ("plasmons") in response to external electromagnetic radiation. Nanorods have multiple plasmon bands compared to nanospheres. We identify four optical sensing and imaging modalities for metallic nanoparticles: (1) aggregation-dependent shifts in plasmon frequency; (2) local refractive index-dependent shifts in plasmon frequency; (3) inelastic (surface-enhanced Raman) light scattering; and (4) elastic (Rayleigh) light scattering. The surface chemistry of the nanoparticles must be tunable to create chemical specificity, and is a key requirement for successful sensing and imaging platforms.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. One-dimensional colloidal gold and silver nanostructures.
- Author
-
Murphy CJ, Gole AM, Hunyadi SE, and Orendorff CJ
- Abstract
One-dimensional (1-D) metallic nanoscale materials have long been of interest to many groups of scientists. Within the last 2 decades, great advances in the synthesis of metallic nanorods and nanowires have been made, with a variety of templating methods. More recently, bottom-up chemical syntheses of these materials have become increasingly reported in the literature. This Forum Article describes the synthesis, physical properties, and potential applications of 1-D metals, with an emphasis on silver and gold derived from studies in the authors' laboratories.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Anisotropic metal nanoparticles: Synthesis, assembly, and optical applications.
- Author
-
Murphy CJ, Sau TK, Gole AM, Orendorff CJ, Gao J, Gou L, Hunyadi SE, and Li T
- Subjects
- Crystallization, Gold chemistry, Light, Metal Nanoparticles ultrastructure, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Scattering, Radiation, Silver chemistry, Surface Properties, Anisotropy, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry
- Abstract
This feature article highlights work from the authors' laboratories on the synthesis, assembly, reactivity, and optical applications of metallic nanoparticles of nonspherical shape, especially nanorods. The synthesis is a seed-mediated growth procedure, in which metal salts are reduced initially with a strong reducing agent, in water, to produce approximately 4 nm seed particles. Subsequent reduction of more metal salt with a weak reducing agent, in the presence of structure-directing additives, leads to the controlled formation of nanorods of specified aspect ratio and can also yield other shapes of nanoparticles (stars, tetrapods, blocks, cubes, etc.). Variations in reaction conditions and crystallographic analysis of gold nanorods have led to insight into the growth mechanism of these materials. Assembly of nanorods can be driven by simple evaporation from solution or by rational design with molecular-scale connectors. Short nanorods appear to be more chemically reactive than long nanorods. Finally, optical applications in sensing and imaging, which take advantage of the visible light absorption and scattering properties of the nanorods, are discussed.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.