Modulating luminescence and assembled shapes of ultrasmall Au nanoparticles towards hierarchical information encryption |
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Authors: | Tingyao Zhou Xingyu Jiang |
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Affiliation: | Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Smart Healthcare Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, 1088 Xueyuan Road, Nanshan District, Shenzhen Guangdong 518055 P. R. China, |
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Abstract: | ![]() Because of their intriguing luminescence performances, ultrasmall Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) and their assemblies hold great potential in diverse applications, including information security. However, modulating luminescence and assembled shapes of ultrasmall AuNPs to achieve a high-security level of stored information is an enduring and significant challenge. Herein, we report a facile strategy using Pluronic F127 as an adaptive template for preparing Au nanoassemblies (AuNAs) with controllable structures and tunable luminescence to realize hierarchical information encryption through modulating excitation light. The template guided ultrasmall AuNP in situ growth in the inner core and assembled these ultrasmall AuNPs into intriguing necklace-like or spherical nanoarchitectures. By regulating the type of ligand and reductant, their emission was also tunable, ranging from green to the second near-infrared (NIR-II) region. The excitation-dependent emission could be shifted from red to NIR-II, and this significant shift was considerably distinct from the small range variation of conventional nanomaterials in the visible region. In virtue of tunable luminescence and controllable structures, we expanded their potential utility to hierarchical information encryption, and the true information could be decrypted in a two-step sequential manner by regulating excitation light. These findings provided a novel pathway for creating uniform nanomaterials with desired functions for potential applications in information security.A robust strategy is reported for in situ synthesis of Au nanoassemblies with tunable emission and controllable shapes. Utilizing excitation-dependent emission from red to NIR-II, hierarchical encryption is presented in a two-step decoding manner. |
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