Magic numbers in DNA-stabilized fluorescent silver clusters lead to magic colors

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Abstract

DNA-stabilized silver clusters are remarkable for the selection of fluorescence color by the sequence of the stabilizing DNA oligomer. Yet despite a growing number of applications that exploit this property, no large-scale studies have probed origins of cluster color or whether certain colors occur more frequently than others. Here we employ a set of 684 randomly chosen 10-base oligomers to address these questions. Rather than a flat distribution, we find that specific color bands dominate. Cluster size data indicate that these "magic colors" originate from the existence of magic numbers for DNA-stabilized silver clusters, which differ from those of spheroidal gold clusters stabilized by small-molecule ligands. Elongated cluster structures, enforced by multiple base ligands along the DNA, can account for both magic number sizes and color variation around peak wavelength populations. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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Copp, S. M., Schultz, D., Swasey, S., Pavlovich, J., Debord, M., Chiu, A., … Gwinn, E. (2014). Magic numbers in DNA-stabilized fluorescent silver clusters lead to magic colors. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 5(6), 959–963. https://doi.org/10.1021/jz500146q

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