Metal-Enhanced Near-Infrared Fluorescence by Micropatterned Gold Nanocages
Andrea Camposeo (1), Luana Persano (1), Rita Manco (1,2), Yi Wang, (3,4), Pompilio Del Carro (1), Chao Zhang (5), Zhi-Yuan Li (5,6), Dario, Pisignano (1,2), Younan Xia (3) ((1) Istituto Nanoscienze-CNR, (2)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the development of gold nanocage micropatterned substrates that significantly enhance near-infrared fluorescence, with potential applications in biomedical diagnostics and targeted drug delivery.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel NIR-MEF platform using micropatterned gold nanocages with controlled spatial arrangement, achieving up to 7-fold fluorescence enhancement.
Findings
Maximum enhancement of 2-7 times at 80 nm distance
Experimental and theoretical analysis of distance-dependent fluorescence
Gold nanocages' stability and tunability enable multifunctional biomedical applications
Abstract
In metal-enhanced fluorescence (MEF), the localized surface plasmon resonances of metallic nanostructures amplify the absorption of excitation light and assist in radiating the consequent fluorescence of nearby molecules to the far-field. This effect is at the base of various technologies that have strong impact on fields such as optics, medical diagnostics and biotechnology. Among possible emission bands, those in the near-infrared (NIR) are particularly intriguing and widely used in proteomics and genomics due to its noninvasive character for biomolecules, living cells, and tissues, which greatly motivates the development of effective, and eventually multifunctional NIR-MEF platforms. Here we demonstrate NIR-MEF substrates based on Au nanocages micropatterned with a tight spatial control. The dependence of the fluorescence enhancement on the distance between the nanocage and the…
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