4.6 Article

Surface-grafted hybrid material consisting of gold nanoparticles and dextran exhibits mobility and reversible aggregation on a surface

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 5097-5099

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la0629431

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Gold nanoparticles linked to linear carboxylated dextran chains were attached to 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane-functionalized glass surfaces. This method provides novel hybrid nanostructures on a surface with the unique optical properties of gold nanoparticles. The particles attached to the surface retain the capability to aggregate and disaggregate in response to their environment. This procedure presents an alternative method to the immobilization of gold nanoparticles onto planar substrates. Compared to gold nanoparticle monolayers, larger particle surface densities were obtained. Exposure to hydrophobic environments changes the conformation of the hydrophilic dextran chains, causing the gold nanoparticles to aggregate and inducing changes in the absorption spectrum such as red-shifting and broadening of the plasmon absorption peaks. These changes, characteristic of particle aggregation, are reversible. When the substrates are dried and then immersed in an aqueous environment, these changes can be visually observed in a reversible fashion and the sample changes color from the red color of colloidal gold to a bluish-purple color of aggregated nanoparticles. Surface-bound nanoparticles that retain their mobility when attached to a surface by means of a flexible polymer chain could expand the use of aggregation-based assays to solid substrates.

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