Nanoplasmonic Upconverting Nanoparticles as Orientation Sensors for Single Particle Microscopy

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Abstract

We showed that the anisotropic disk shape of nanoplasmonic upconverting nanoparticles (NP-UCNPs) creates changes in fluorescence intensity during rotational motion. We determined the orientation by a three-fold change in fluorescence intensity. We further found that the luminescence intensity was strongly dependent on the particle orientation and on polarization of the excitation light. The luminescence intensity showed a three-fold difference between flat and on-edge orientations. The intensity also varied sinusoidally with the polarization of the incident light, with an Imax/Imin ratio of up to 2.02. Both the orientation dependence and Imax/Imin are dependent on the presence of a gold shell on the UCNP. Because the fluorescence depends on the NP's orientation, the rotational motion of biomolecules coupled to the NP can be detected. Finally, we tracked the real-time rotational motion of a single NP-UCNP in solution between slide and coverslip with diffusivity up to 10 '2 μm2s '1.

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Green, K. K., Wirth, J., & Lim, S. F. (2017). Nanoplasmonic Upconverting Nanoparticles as Orientation Sensors for Single Particle Microscopy. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00869-3

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