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Temperature Determination of Resonantly Excited Plasmonic Branched Gold Nanoparticles by X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy

โœ Scribed by Bieke Van de Broek; Didier Grandjean; Jesse Trekker; Jian Ye; Kris Verstreken; Guido Maes; Gustaaf Borghs; Sergey Nikitenko; Liesbet Lagae; Carmen Bartic; Kristiaan Temst; Margriet J. Van Bael


Book ID
104593776
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
741 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
1613-6810

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

The fields of bioscience and nanomedicine demand precise thermometry for nanoparticle heat characterization down to the nanoscale regime. Since current methods often use indirect and less accurate techniques to determine the nanoparticle temperature, there is a pressing need for a direct and reliable elementโ€specific method. Inโ€situ extended Xโ€ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy is used to determine the thermoโ€optical properties of plasmonic branched gold nanoparticles upon resonant laser illumination. With EXAFS, the direct determination of the nanoparticle temperature increase upon laser illumination is possible via the thermal influence on the gold lattice parameters. More specifically, using the change of the Debyeโ€“Waller term representing the lattice disorder, the temperature increase is selectively measured within the plasmonic branched nanoparticles upon resonant laser illumination. In addition, the signal intensity shows that the nanoparticle concentration in the beam more than doubles during laser illumination, thereby demonstrating that photothermal heating is a dynamic process. A comparable temperature increase is measured in the nanoparticle suspension using a thermocouple. This good correspondence between the temperature at the level of the nanoparticle and at the level of the suspension points to an efficient heat transfer between the nanoparticle and the surrounding medium, thus confirming the potential of branched gold nanoparticles for hyperthermia applications. This work demonstrates that Xโ€ray absorption spectroscopyโ€based nanothermometry could be a valuable tool in the fastโ€growing number of applications of plasmonic nanoparticles, particularly in life sciences and medicine.


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