Beilstein J. Nanotechnol.2024,15, 678–693, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.56
hydrogels) is shown in Figure 8.
The net temperature rise of the gold nanomakura suspension and deionized water during visible broadbandirradiation ON (heating) and OFF (cooling) for 1200 seconds each, measured using a “K-type” thermocouple is shown in Figure 8. Figure 8a shows the heating and cooling of
Figure 8b. Further, in the OFF case (cooling), the exponential decay of the temperature in the nanoparticle suspension was observed.
The rise in temperature of the powdered nanoparticles and of nanoparticles incorporated in hydrogel beads during visible broadbandirradiation in the ON case (heating) for
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Figure 1:
(a) Seed-mediated synthesis of CTAB-AuNM, MTAB-AuNM, and DTAB-AuNM, a two-step reduction method sho...
Beilstein J. Nanotechnol.2023,14, 205–217, doi:10.3762/bjnano.14.20
evaluated. Results show that for a concentration of 20.0 µg/mL, 40 nm gold nanospheres, 25 × 47 nm gold nanorods (GNRs), and 10 × 41 nm GNRs show a 4–110% higher photothermal conversion efficiency under NIR broadbandirradiation than under NIR laser irradiation. Broadbandirradiation seems suitable to
attain higher efficiencies for the nanoparticles whose absorption wavelength is different from the irradiation wavelength. Lower concentrations (1.25–5 µg/mL) of such nanoparticles show 2–3 times higher efficiency under NIR broadbandirradiation. For GNRs of sizes 10 × 38 nm and 10 × 41 nm, the different
concentrations show almost equal efficiencies for NIR laser and broadbandirradiation. On increasing the irradiation power from 0.3 to 0.5 W, for 10 × 41 nm GNRs in the concentration range of 2.5–20.0 µg/mL, NIR laser irradiation results in 5–32% higher efficiencies, while NIR broadbandirradiation leads to a 6
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Figure 1:
Experimental setup for the measurement of the temperature rise of GNPs suspensions under irradiatio...