Light-heat conversion dynamics in highly diversified water-dispersed hydrophobic nanocrystal assemblies.
Andrea MazzantiZhijie YangMychel G SilvaNailiang YangGiancarlo RizzaPierre-Eugène CoulonCristian ManzoniAna Maria de PaulaGiulio CerulloGiuseppe Della ValleMarie-Paule PileniPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
We investigate, with a combination of ultrafast optical spectroscopy and semiclassical modeling, the photothermal properties of various water-soluble nanocrystal assemblies. Broadband pump-probe experiments with ∼100-fs time resolution in the visible and near infrared reveal a complex scenario for their transient optical response that is dictated by their hybrid composition at the nanoscale, comprising metallic (Au) or semiconducting ([Formula: see text]) nanostructures and a matrix of organic ligands. We track the whole chain of energy flow that starts from light absorption by the individual nanocrystals and subsequent excitation of out-of-equilibrium carriers followed by the electron-phonon equilibration, occurring in a few picoseconds, and then by the heat release to the matrix on the 100-ps timescale. Two-dimensional finite-element method electromagnetic simulations of the composite nanostructure and multitemperature modeling of the energy flow dynamics enable us to identify the key mechanism presiding over the light-heat conversion in these kinds of nanomaterials. We demonstrate that hybrid (organic-inorganic) nanocrystal assemblies can operate as efficient nanoheaters by exploiting the high absorption from the individual nanocrystals, enabled by the dilution of the inorganic phase that is followed by a relatively fast heating of the embedding organic matrix, occurring on the 100-ps timescale.
Keyphrases
- water soluble
- energy transfer
- high resolution
- heat stress
- high speed
- finite element
- molecular dynamics
- single molecule
- atomic force microscopy
- quantum dots
- drug delivery
- sensitive detection
- genome wide
- cancer therapy
- gene expression
- cerebral ischemia
- reduced graphene oxide
- liquid chromatography
- preterm infants
- blood brain barrier
- tandem mass spectrometry