Files

Abstract

Surfactants offer a tunable approach for modulating the exposed surface area of a nanoparticle. They further present a scalable and cost-effective means for suspending single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), which have demonstrated practical use as fluorescence sensors. Though surfactant suspensions show record quantum yields for SWCNTs in aqueous solutions, they lack the selectivity that is vital for optical sensing. We present a new method for controlling the selectivity of optical SWCNT sensors through colloidal templating of the exposed surface area. Colloidal nanotube sensors were obtained using various concentrations of sodium cholate, and their performances were compared to DNA-SWCNT optical sensors. Sensor responses were measured against a library of bioanalytes, including neurotransmitters, amino acids, and sugars. We report an intensity response towards dopamine and serotonin for all sodium cholate-suspended SWCNT concentrations. We further identify a selective, 14.1 nm and 10.3 nm wavelength red-shifting response to serotonin for SWCNTs suspended in 1.5 and 0.5 mM sodium cholate, respectively. Through controlled, adsorption-based tuning of the nanotube surface, this study demonstrates the applicability of sub-critical colloidal suspensions to achieve selectivities exceeding those previously reported for DNA-SWCNT sensors.

Details

Actions