Paper
20 August 2009 Customized multiphotonics nanotools for bioapplications: soft organic nanodots as an eco-friendly alternative to quantum dots
Olivier Mongin, Cédric Rouxel, Jean-Marie Vabre, Youssef Mir, Anna Pla-Quintana, Yiqian Wei, Anne-Marie Caminade, Jean-Pierre Majoral, Mireille Blanchard-Desce
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Abstract
Quantum dots have been shown to provide a particularly effective approach to bright nano-objects for bioimaging due to their unique optical properties, including their robust and size-dependent fluorescence. However these "hard" nanoparticles raised a number of questions related to toxicity, biocompatibility and/or environmental issues. In that context, we have developed a new class of "soft" fully organic alternative nanoparticles (i.e. organic nanodots). Our approach relies on the confinement of a large number of organic chromophores within spherical nano-objects of controlled size and structure, by embedding them within non-toxic and biocompatible dendrimeric architectures. This highly modular strategy yielded organic nanodots of different sizes, colors and nature (lipophilic and hydrophilic). In contrast with quantum dots (QDs), their emission color does not depend on their size, but only on the nature of their constituting chromophoric subunits and their relative arrangement. Several series of nanodots of few nanometers in diameter have been studied, exhibiting exceptional one and two-photon brightness and often outperforming the best quantum dots. Nanodots offer major promises for bio and nanophotonics.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Olivier Mongin, Cédric Rouxel, Jean-Marie Vabre, Youssef Mir, Anna Pla-Quintana, Yiqian Wei, Anne-Marie Caminade, Jean-Pierre Majoral, and Mireille Blanchard-Desce "Customized multiphotonics nanotools for bioapplications: soft organic nanodots as an eco-friendly alternative to quantum dots", Proc. SPIE 7403, Nanobiosystems: Processing, Characterization, and Applications II, 740303 (20 August 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.826699
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Absorption

Quantum dots

Luminescence

Chromophores

Neodymium

Quantum efficiency

Nanoparticles

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