Paper
8 July 2015 NIR-emitting molecular-based nanoparticles as new two-photon absorbing nanotools for single particle tracking
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Proceedings Volume 9523, International Conference on Nano-Bio Sensing, Imaging, and Spectroscopy 2015; 95230M (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2189638
Event: International Conference on Nano-Bio Sensing, Imaging, and Spectroscopy 2015, 2015, Jeju, Korea, Republic of
Abstract
In order to provide a green alternative to QDs for bioimaging purposes and aiming at designing bright nanoparticles combining both large one- and two-photon brightness, a bottom-up route based on the molecular engineering of dedicated red to NIR emitting dyes that spontaneously form fluorescent organic nanoparticles (FONs) has been implemented. These fully organic nanoparticles built from original quadrupolar dyes are prepared using a simple, expeditious and green protocol that yield very small molecular-based nanoparticles (radius ~ 7 nm) suspension in water showing a nice NIR emission (λem=710 nm). These FONs typically have absorption coefficient more than two orders larger than popular NIR-emitting dyes (such as Alexa Fluor 700, Cy5.5 ….) and much larger Stokes shift values (i.e. up to over 5500 cm-1). They also show very large two-photon absorption response in the 800-1050 nm region (up to about 106 GM) of major promise for two-photon excited fluorescence microscopy. Thanks to their brightness and enhanced photostability, these FONs could be imaged as isolated nanoparticles and tracked using wide-field imaging. As such, thanks to their size and composition (absence of heavy metals), they represent highly promising alternatives to NIR-emitting QDs for use in bioimaging and single particle tracking applications. Moreover, efficient FONs coating was achieved by using a polymeric additive built from a long hydrophobic (PPO) and a short hydrophilic (PEO) segment and having a cationic head group able to interact with the highly negative surface of FONs. This electrostatically-driven interaction promotes both photoluminescence and two-photon absorption enhancement leading to an increase of two-photon brightness of about one order of magnitude. This opens the way to wide-field single particle tracking under two-photon excitation
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. Daniel, A. G. Godin, G. Clermont, B. Lounis, L. Cognet, and M. Blanchard-Desce "NIR-emitting molecular-based nanoparticles as new two-photon absorbing nanotools for single particle tracking", Proc. SPIE 9523, International Conference on Nano-Bio Sensing, Imaging, and Spectroscopy 2015, 95230M (8 July 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2189638
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KEYWORDS
Polymers

Nanoparticles

Luminescence

Absorption

Coating

Particles

Quantum efficiency

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