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Lähetys on päättynyt 2020-08-11 11:00:00

Live broadcast: Nanoseminar

11.8.2020 at 10-11: "Gold-Silver Core-Shell particles for improved plasmonic chirality and sensing" by Prof. Tim Liedl

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10:13Jussi TWelcome everybody. We will start very soon :-)

10:15Karolina S.great ! Looking forward.

10:22Jussi TYou can raise questions also here at the chat, mostly at the end of the talk.

10:22Jussi TI will read the questions aloud here

10:50Gerrit G.What forms the hinge? In other words, what allows the two rods to rotate around a single pivot point?

10:57Gerrit G.Got it, thanks!

11:08Kha NDid you compare the g-factor of the structures between Silver nanorods and Au@Ag nanorods? Should use directly Silver nanorods?

11:08Karolina S.Is the DNA chirality enhanced by attaching it to the Ag/Au nanorods surface or the total absorption of the system is increased?

11:14Karolina S.About the strand displacement: Are they generally caused by presence of too short strands in the design?

11:20Ville S.With the Ag/Au nanorod synthesis, does the size/thickness of the composite particles stay the same in respect to native Au nanorods? I.e. does the silver replace gold on the surface or does it build around it?

11:25Jussi TThanks you for the online audience also :-)

11:25Ville S.Thanks!

The spatial organization of metal nanoparticles has become an important tool for manipulating light in nanophotonic applications. Silver nanoparticles, particularly silver nanorods have excellent plasmonic properties, but are prone to oxidation and are therefore inherently unstable in aqueous solutions and salt containing buffers. Consequently, gold nanoparticles have often been favored, despite their inferior optical performance. Bimetallic, i.e. gold-silver core-shell nanoparticles can resolve this issue. We present a method for synthesizing highly stable gold/silver core-shell nanorods that are instantaneously functionalized with DNA, enabling chiral self-assembly on DNA origami. The silver shell gives rise to an enhancement of plasmonic properties, reflected here in strongly increased circular dichroism, as compared to pristine gold nanorods. Gold-silver nanorods are ideal candidates for plasmonic sensing with increased sensitivity as needed in pathogen RNA or antibody testing (including potentially SARS-CoV-2), for non-linear optics and light-funneling applications in surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Furthermore, the control of interparticle orientation enables the study of plasmonic phenomena, in particular synergistic effects arising from plasmonic coupling of such bimetallic systems.