The immobilization of proteins on gold-coated magnetic nanoparticles and the subsequent recognition of the targeted proteins provide an effective means for the separation of proteins via application of a magnetic filed. A key challenge is the ability to fabricate such nanoparticles with the desired core-shell nanostructure. In this article, we report findings of the fabrication and characterization of gold-coated iron oxide (Fe2O3 and Fe3O4) core@shell nanoparticles (Fe oxide@Au) toward novel functional biomaterials. A hetero-interparticle coalescence strategy has been demonstrated for fabricating Fe oxide@Au nanoparticles that exhibit controllable sizes ranging from 5 to 100 nm and high monodispersity. Composition and surface analyses have proven that the resulting nanoparticles consist of the Fe2O3 core and the Au shell. The magnetically active Fe oxide core and thiolate-active Au shell were shown to be viable for exploiting the Au surface protein-binding reactivity for bioassay and the Fe oxide core magnetism for magnetic bioseparation. These findings are entirely new and could form the basis for fabricating magnetic nanoparticles as biomaterials with tunable size, magnetism, and surface binding properties.
The interfacing of soft and hard electronics is a key challenge for flexible hybrid electronics. Currently, a multisubstrate approach is employed, where soft and hard devices are fabricated or assembled on separate substrates, and bonded or interfaced using connectors; this hinders the flexibility of the device and is prone to interconnect issues. Here, a single substrate interfacing approach is reported, where soft devices, i.e., sensors, are directly printed on Kapton polyimide substrates that are widely used for fabricating flexible printed circuit boards (FPCBs). Utilizing a process flow compatible with the FPCB assembly process, a wearable sensor patch is fabricated composed of inkjet‐printed gold electrocardiography (ECG) electrodes and a stencil‐printed nickel oxide thermistor. The ECG electrodes provide 1 mVp–p ECG signal at 4.7 cm electrode spacing and the thermistor is highly sensitive at normal body temperatures, and demonstrates temperature coefficient, α ≈ –5.84% K–1 and material constant, β ≈ 4330 K. This sensor platform can be extended to a more sophisticated multisensor platform where sensors fabricated using solution processable functional inks can be interfaced to hard electronics for health and performance monitoring, as well as internet of things applications.
The ability to tune interparticle spatial properties of nanoparticle assemblies is essential for the design of sensing materials toward desired sensitivity and selectivity. This paper reports findings of an investigation of molecularly mediated thin film assemblies of metal nanoparticles with controllable interparticle spatial properties as a sensing array. The interparticle spatial properties are controlled by a combination of alpha,omega-difunctional alkyl mediators (X-(CH(2))(n)-X) such as alkyl dithiols, dicarboxylate acids, and alkanethiol shells capped on nanoparticles. Alkanethiolate-capped gold and gold-silver alloy nanoparticles (2-3 nm) were studied as model building blocks toward the thin film assemblies, whereas the variation of alkyl chain length manipulates the interparticle spacing. The thin films assembled on an interdigitated microelectrode array platform are characterized for determining their responses to the sorption of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The correlation between the response sensitivity and the interparticle spacing properties revealed not only a clear dependence of the sensitivity on alkyl chain length but also the occurrence of a dramatic change of the sensitivity in a region of chain length for the alkyl mediator comparable with that of the capping alkyl chains. This finding reflects a balance between the interparticle chain-chain cohesive interdigitation and the nanostructure-vapor interaction which determines the relative change of the electrical conductivity of the inked nanoparticle thin film in response to vapor sorption. The results, along with statistical analysis of the sensor array data in terms of sensitivity and selectivity, have provided important insights into the detailed delineation between the interparticle spacing and the nanostructured sensing properties.
This report demonstrates for the first time that the size selectivity of nanoparticles in the thermal processing solution of pre-synthesized nanoparticles can be achieved by molecularly tuning the chain length and concentration of alkanethiols.
The use of metal nanoparticles as building blocks toward thin film assembly creates intriguing opportunities for exploring multifunctional properties. Such an exploration requires the ability to engineer the size, shape, composition, and especially interparticle properties in nanoparticle assemblies for harnessing the collective properties of the nanoscale building blocks. This article highlights some of the important findings of our investigations of thin film assemblies of molecularly linked nanoparticles for exploiting their multifunctional and collective properties in molecular recognition and chemical sensing. The thermally activated processing approach presents a viable pathway for nanoengineering metal, alloy, and core-shell nanoparticles as building blocks. The molecular mediator-templating approach offers an effective strategy to thin film assemblies of the nanoscale building blocks that impart multifunctional properties. In such thin film assemblies, the interparticle interactions and structures dictate the correlation between the nanostructural parameters and the optical and electrical properties. By highlighting selected examples involving ligand-framework binding of ionic species at the film/liquid interface and electrical responses to molecular sorption at the film/gas interface, the multifunctional properties of the thin film assemblies are further discussed in terms of interparticle covalent, hydrogen bonding, ionic, or van der Waals interactions in a framework-type architecture for the creation of molecular recognition and chemical sensing sites that can be tuned chemically or electrochemically. Implications of these insights to expanding the exploration of nanoparticle thin film assemblies for a wide range of technological applications are also discussed.
This paper describes the results of a study of a few design parameters influencing the performance of sensor arrays constructed from nanostructured thin films and interdigitated microelectrodes (IMEs). The nanostructured thin films on the IME devices were prepared from nonanedithiol (NDT) and mercaptoundecanoic acid (MUA) linked assemblies of 2-nm sized gold nanoparticles. The sensor array data in response to volatile organic compounds were collected and analyzed using fractional factorial experimental design and analysis of variance for understanding effects of the design parameters on the sensitivity. While the smaller value for the microelectrode space, width, and length generally led to higher response sensitivity, a strong dependence on the nature of the nanostructured thin films was found. The microelectrode space was the most important design parameter for NDT-based thin films. However, the microelectrode space, width, and length were found to play almost equally important roles for MUA-based thin films. The principal component analysis results for classification performances of the arrays consisting of a set of thin films have demonstrated the possibility of optimizing sensor arrays by appropriate selections of microelectrode parameters and nanostructured sensing films.
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