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Atomically Precise Au<sub>42</sub> Nanorods with Longitudinal Excitons for an Intense Photothermal Effect
98
Citations
48
References
2022
Year
Metallic-state gold nanorods are well known to exhibit strong longitudinal plasmon excitations in the near-infrared region (NIR) suitable for photothermal conversion. However, when the size decreases below ∼2 nm, Au nanostructures become nonmetallic, and whether the longitudinal excitation in plasmonic nanorods can be inherited is unknown. Here, we report atomically precise rod-shaped Au<sub>42</sub>(SCH<sub>2</sub>Ph)<sub>32</sub> with a hexagonal-close-packed Au<sub>20</sub> kernel of aspect ratio as high as 6.2, which exhibits an intense absorption at 815 nm with a high molar absorption coefficient of 1.4 × 10<sup>5</sup> M<sup>-1</sup> cm<sup>-1</sup>. Compared to other rod-shaped nanoclusters, Au<sub>42</sub> possesses a much more effective photothermal conversion with a large temperature increase of ∼27 °C within 5 min (λ<sub>ex</sub> = 808 nm, 1 W cm<sup>-2</sup>) at an ultralow concentration of 50 μg mL<sup>-1</sup> in toluene. Density functional theory calculations show that the NIR transition is mainly along the long axis of the Au<sub>20</sub> kernel in Au<sub>42</sub>, i.e., a longitudinal excitonic oscillation, akin to the longitudinal plasmon in metallic-state nanorods. Transient absorption spectroscopy reveals that the fast decay in Au<sub>42</sub> is similar to that of shorter-aspect-ratio nanorods but is followed by an additional slow decay with a long lifetime of 2400 ns for the Au<sub>42</sub> nanorod. This work provides the first case that an intense longitudinal excitation is obtained in molecular-like nanorods, which can be used as photothermal converters and hold potential in biomedical therapy, photoacoustic imaging, and photocatalysis.
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