Plasmonic nanostructures exhibiting dynamically tunable chiroptical responses hold great promise for broad applications such as sensing, catalysis, and enantioselective analysis. Despite the successful fabrication of chiral structures through diverse templates, creating dynamic chiroptical materials with fast and reversible responses to external stimuli is still challenging. This work showcases reversible magnetic assembly and active tuning of plasmonic chiral superstructures by introducing a chiral magnetic field from a cubic permanent magnet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
October 2023
Steelmaking contributes 8% to the total CO emissions globally, primarily due to coal-based iron ore reduction. Clean hydrogen-based ironmaking has variable performance because the dominant gas-solid reduction mechanism is set by the defects and pores inside the mm- to nm-sized oxide particles that change significantly as the reaction progresses. While these governing dynamics are essential to establish continuous flow of iron and its ores through reactors, the direct link between agglomeration and chemistry is still contested due to missing measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncorporating stimuli-responsive mechanisms into chiral assemblies of nanostructures offers numerous opportunities to create optical materials capable of dynamically modulating their chiroptical properties. In this study, we demonstrate the formation of chiral superstructures by assembling FeO@polyaniline hybrid nanorods by using a gradient magnetic field. The resulting superstructures exhibit a dual response to changes in both the magnetic field and solution pH, enabling dynamic regulation of the position, intensity, and sign of its circular dichroism peaks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe wide accessibility to nanostructures with high uniformity and controllable sizes and morphologies provides great opportunities for creating complex superstructures with unique functionalities. Employing anisotropic nanostructures as the building blocks significantly enriches the superstructural phases, while their orientational control for obtaining long-range orders has remained a significant challenge. One solution is to introduce magnetic components into the anisotropic nanostructures to enable precise control of their orientations and positions in the superstructures by manipulating magnetic interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloidal assembly into chiral superstructures is usually accomplished with templating or lithographic patterning methods that are only applicable to materials with specific compositions and morphologies over narrow size ranges. Here, chiral superstructures can be rapidly formed by magnetically assembling materials of any chemical compositions at all scales, from molecules to nano- and microstructures. We show that a quadrupole field chirality is generated by permanent magnets caused by consistent field rotation in space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegrating plasmonic resonance into photonic bandgap nanostructures promises additional control over their optical properties. Here, one-dimensional (1D) plasmonic photonic crystals with angular-dependent structural colors are fabricated by assembling magnetoplasmonic colloidal nanoparticles under an external magnetic field. Unlike conventional 1D photonic crystals, the assembled 1D periodic structures show angular-dependent colors based on the selective activation of optical diffraction and plasmonic scattering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTitanium nitride (TiN) is presented as an alternative plasmonic nanomaterial to the commonly used gold (Au) for its potential use in laser rewarming of cryopreserved biomaterials. The rewarming of vitrified, glass like state, cryopreserved biomaterials is a delicate process as potential ice formation leads to mechanical stress and cracking on a macroscale, and damage to cell walls and DNA on a microscale, ultimately leading to the destruction of the biomaterial. The use of plasmonic nanomaterials dispersed in cryoprotective agent solutions to rapidly convert optical radiation into heat, generally supplied by a focused laser beam, proposes a novel approach to overcome this difficulty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEngineering the nucleation and growth of plasmonic metals (Ag and Au) on their pre-existing seeds is expected to produce nanostructures with unconventional morphologies and plasmonic properties that may find unique applications in sensing, catalysis, and broadband energy harvesting. Typical seed-mediated growth processes take advantage of the perfect lattice match between the deposited metal and seeds to induce conformal coating, leading to either simple size increases (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotothermal actuators have attracted increasing attention due to their ability to convert light energy into mechanical deformation and locomotion. This work reports a freestanding, multidirectional photothermal robot that can walk along a predesigned pathway by modulating laser polarization and on-off switching. Magnetic-plasmonic hybrid Fe O /Ag nanorods are synthesized using an unconventional templating approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the unconventional space-free confined growth of Au nanoshells with well-defined plasmonic properties and active tuning of their plasmon coupling by the nanoscale magnetic assembly. The seeded growth of Au exclusively occurred at the hard-soft interfaces between the FeO core and phenolic resin without the need of creating a limiting space, which represents a general and elegant approach to various core-shell nanostructures. The deformability of permeable phenolic layers plays an essential role in regulating the interfacial growth of Au nanoshells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
July 2015
To solve the wetting capability issue of commercial polypropylene (PP) separators in lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), we developed a simple dipping surface-coating process based on tannic acid (TA), a natural plant polyphenol. Fourier transform infrared and X-ray photoelectron measurements indicate that the TA is coated successfully on the PP separators. Scanning electron microscopy images show that the TA coating does not destroy the microporous structure of the separators.
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