Assembling Near-Infrared Dye on the Surface of Near-Infrared Silica-Coated Copper Sulphide Plasmonic Nanoparticles

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Jan 27;13(3):510. doi: 10.3390/nano13030510.

Abstract

Functionalization of colloidal nanoparticles with organic dyes, which absorb photons in complementary spectral ranges, brings a synergistic effect for harvesting additional light energy. Here, we show functionalization of near-infrared (NIR) plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs) of bare and amino-group functionalized mesoporous silica-coated copper sulphide (Cu2-xS@MSS and Cu2-xS@MSS-NH2) with specific tricarbocyanine NIR dye possessing sulfonate end groups. The role of specific surface chemistry in dye assembling on the surface of NPs is demonstrated, depending on the organic polar liquids or water used as a dispersant solvent. It is shown that dye binding to the NP surfaces occurs with different efficiency, but mostly in the monomer form in polar organic solvents. Conversely, the aqueous medium leads to different scenarios according to the NP surface chemistry. Predominant formation of the disordered dye monomers occurs on the bare surface of mesoporous silica shell (MSS), whereas the amino-group functionalized MSS accepts dye predominantly in the form of dimers. It is found that the dye-NP interaction overcomes the dye-dye interaction, leading to disruption of dye J-aggregates in the presence of the NPs. The different organization of the dye molecules on the surface of silica-coated copper sulphide NPs provides tuning of their specific functional properties, such as hot-band absorption and photoluminescence.

Keywords: dye immobilization; near-infrared dye; plasmonic nanoparticles; silica-coated copper sulphide; surface chemistry.

Grants and funding

O.D. is grateful to the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Invitational Fellowship for Research in Japan (Fellowship ID L22547) and Yamagata University Center of Excellence (YU-COE) program, Yamagata University Carbon Neutral Research Center (YUCaN), which stimulated this work.