Hybrid Silver Nanocubes for Improved Plasmon-Enhanced Singlet Oxygen Production and Inactivation of Bacteria

Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS

Publication date

2018-01-09



Abstract

Plasmonic nanoparticles can strongly interact with adjacent photosensitizer molecules, resulting in a significant alteration of their singlet oxygen (1O2) production. In this work, we report the next generation of metal-enhanced 1O2 nanoplatforms exploiting the lightning rod effect, or plasmon hot spots, in anisotropic (nonspherical) metal nanoparticles. We describe the synthesis of Rose Bengal-decorated silica-coated silver nanocubes (Ag@SiO2-RB NCs) with silica shell thicknesses ranging from 5 to 50 nm based on an optimized protocol yielding highly homogeneous Ag NCs. Steady-state and time-resolved 1O2 measurements demonstrate not only the silica shell thickness dependence on the metal-enhanced 1O2 production phenomenon but also the superiority of this next generation of nanoplatforms. A maximum enhancement of 1O2 of approximately 12-fold is observed with a 10 nm silica shell, which is among the largest 1O2 production metal enhancement factors ever reported for a colloidal suspension of nanoparticles. Finally, the Ag@SiO2-RB NCs were benchmarked against the Ag@SiO2-RB nanospheres previously reported by our group, and the superior 1O2 production of Ag@SiO2-RB NCs resulted in improved antimicrobial activities in photodynamic inactivation experiments using both Gram-positive and -negative bacteria model strains.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

Pages

p.11

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in

Journal of the American Chemical Society 2019, 141 (1), 684–692

Grant Agreement Number

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/PN I+D/CTQ2016-78454-C2-1-R

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Rights

© American Chemical Society

© American Chemical Society

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

IQS [794]