Nanoscale biomolecular detection limit for gold nanoparticles based on near-infrared response

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Abstract

Gold nanoparticles have been widely used during the past few years in various technical and biomedical applications. In particular, the resonance optical properties of nanometer-sized particles have been employed to design biochips and biosensors used as analytical tools. The optical properties of nonfunctionalized gold nanoparticles and core-gold nanoshells play a crucial role for the design of biosensors where gold surface is used as a sensing component. Gold nanoparticles exhibit excellent optical tunability at visible and near-infrared frequencies leading to sharp peaks in their spectral extinction. In this paper, we study how the optical properties of gold nanoparticles and core-gold nanoshells are changed as a function of different sizes, shapes, composition, and biomolecular coating with characteristic shifts towards the near-infrared region. We show that the optical tenability can be carefully tailored for particle sizes falling in the range 100-150 nm. The results should improve the design of sensors working at the detection limit. © 2012 Mario D'Acunto et al.

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APA

D’Acunto, M., Moroni, D., & Salvetti, O. (2012). Nanoscale biomolecular detection limit for gold nanoparticles based on near-infrared response. Advances in Optical Technologies. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/278194

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