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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo González-Rubio is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo González-Rubio.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2016

Reshaping, Fragmentation, and Assembly of Gold Nanoparticles Assisted by Pulse Lasers

Guillermo González-Rubio; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez; Luis M. Liz-Marzán

Conspectus The vast majority of the outstanding applications of metal nanoparticles (NPs) developed during the last two decades have arisen from their unique optical properties. Within this context, rational synthesis and assembly of gold NPs have been the main research focus, aiming at the design of nanoplasmonic devices with tailored optical functionalities. The progress made in this field is thus to be ascribed to the understanding of the origin of the interaction between light and such gold nanostructures, the dynamics of which have been thoroughly investigated with significant contributions from short and ultrashort pulse laser technologies. We focus this Account on the potential of pulse lasers to provide new fundamental insights into the electron dynamics involved in the interaction of light with the free conduction electrons of Au NPs, that is, localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs). The excitation of LSPRs with a femtosecond pulse laser is followed by thermalization of the Au NP electrons and the subsequent relaxation of the nanocrystal lattice and the surrounding environment, which generally results in surface melting. By contrast, nanosecond irradiation usually induces AuNP fragmentation and uncontrolled melting due to overlapping excitation and relaxation phenomena. These concepts have been exploited toward the preparation of highly monodisperse gold nanospheres via pulse laser irradiation of polyhedral nanocrystal colloids, or in the fabrication of nanostructures with “written-in” optical properties. The applicability of pulsed coherent light has been extended toward the direct synthesis and manipulation of Au NPs. Through ablation of a gold target in a liquid with pulse lasers, spherical Au NPs can be synthesized with no need of stabilizing ligands, which is a great advantage in terms of reducing toxicity, rendering these NPs particularly suitable for medical applications. In addition, femtosecond laser irradiation has been proven a unique tool for the controlled welding of plasmonic gold nanostructures by electromagnetic field enhancement at the hot spots of assembled Au NPs. The combination of such nanostructures with pulse lasers promises significant chemical and biochemical advances, including the structural determination of organic reaction intermediates, the investigation of phase transitions in inorganic nanomaterials at mild reaction conditions, or the efficient photothermal destruction of cancer cells avoiding damage of surrounding tissue.


Nano Letters | 2015

Femtosecond Laser-Controlled Tip-to-Tip Assembly and Welding of Gold Nanorods.

Guillermo González-Rubio; Jesús González-Izquierdo; L. Bañares; G. Tardajos; Antonio Rivera; Thomas Altantzis; Sara Bals; Ovidio Peña-Rodríguez; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez; Luis M. Liz-Marzán

Directed assembly of gold nanorods through the use of dithiolated molecular linkers is one of the most efficient methodologies for the morphologically controlled tip-to-tip assembly of this type of anisotropic nanocrystals. However, in a direct analogy to molecular polymerization synthesis, this process is characterized by difficulties in chain-growth control over nanoparticle oligomers. In particular, it is nearly impossible to favor the formation of one type of oligomer, making the methodology hard to use for actual applications in nanoplasmonics. We propose here a light-controlled synthetic procedure that allows obtaining selected plasmonic oligomers in high yield and with reaction times in the scale of minutes by irradiation with low fluence near-infrared (NIR) femtosecond laser pulses. Selective inhibition of the formation of gold nanorod n-mers (trimers) with a longitudinal localized surface plasmon in resonance with a 800 nm Ti:sapphire laser, allowed efficient trapping of the (n – 1)-mers (dimers) by hot spot mediated photothermal decomposition of the interparticle molecular linkers. Laser irradiation at higher energies produced near-field enhancement at the interparticle gaps, which is large enough to melt gold nanorod tips, offering a new pathway toward tip-to-tip welding of gold nanorod oligomers with a plasmonic response at the NIR. Thorough optical and electron microscopy characterization indicates that plasmonic oligomers can be selectively trapped and welded, which has been analyzed in terms of a model that predicts with reasonable accuracy the relative concentrations of the main plasmonic species.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Polyrotaxane-Mediated Self-Assembly of Gold Nanospheres into Fully Reversible Supercrystals†

João Paulo Coelho; Guillermo González-Rubio; Annette Delices; José Osío Barcina; Cástor Salgado; David Ávila; Ovidio Peña-Rodríguez; G. Tardajos; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez

The use of a thiol-functionalized nonionic surfactant to stabilize spherical gold nanoparticles in water induces the spontaneous formation of polyrotaxanes at the nanoparticle surface in the presence of the macrocycle α-cyclodextrin. Whereas using an excess of surfactant an amorphous gold nanocomposite is obtained, under controlled drying conditions the self-assembly between the surface supramolecules provides large and homogenous supercrystals with hexagonal close packing of nanoparticles. Once formed, the self-assembled supercrystals can be fully redispersed in water. The reversibility of the crystallization process may offer an excellent reusable material to prepare gold nanoparticle inks and optical sensors with the potential to be recovered after use.


Science | 2017

Femtosecond laser reshaping yields gold nanorods with ultranarrow surface plasmon resonances

Guillermo González-Rubio; Pablo Díaz-Núñez; Antonio Rivera; Alejandro Prada; G. Tardajos; Jesús González-Izquierdo; L. Bañares; Pablo Llombart; Luis G. MacDowell; Mauricio Alcolea Palafox; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Ovidio Peña-Rodríguez; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez

Laser-shaping nanoparticles For many applications of the plasmon resonances of metal nanoparticles, it is necessary to have narrow resonance lines. However, most methods for synthesizing nanoparticles create a distribution of sizes and shapes that broaden the resonance lines. González-Rubio et al. annealed gold nanorods dispersed in an aqueous solution of a surfactant with carefully tuned ultrafast (femtosecond) laser pulses. This approach reshaped the nanoparticles to create a near-uniform distribution with resonance lines nearly as sharp as for a single nanorod. Science, this issue p. 640 Heating nanoparticles with femtosecond laser pulses can reshape them and sharpen their plasmon resonances. The irradiation of gold nanorod colloids with a femtosecond laser can be tuned to induce controlled nanorod reshaping, yielding colloids with exceptionally narrow localized surface plasmon resonance bands. The process relies on a regime characterized by a gentle multishot reduction of the aspect ratio, whereas the rod shape and volume are barely affected. Successful reshaping can only occur within a narrow window of the heat dissipation rate: Low cooling rates lead to drastic morphological changes, and fast cooling has nearly no effect. Hence, a delicate balance must be achieved between irradiation fluence and surface density of the surfactant on the nanorods. This perfection process is appealing because it provides a simple, fast, reproducible, and scalable route toward gold nanorods with an optical response of exceptional quality, near the theoretical limit.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Nucleation of Amyloid Oligomers by RepA-WH1-Prionoid-Functionalized Gold Nanorods.

Cristina Fernández; Guillermo González-Rubio; Judith Langer; G. Tardajos; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Rafael Giraldo; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez

Understanding protein amyloidogenesis is an important topic in protein science, fueled by the role of amyloid aggregates, especially oligomers, in the etiology of a number of devastating human degenerative diseases. However, the mechanisms that determine the formation of amyloid oligomers remain elusive due to the high complexity of the amyloidogenesis process. For instance, gold nanoparticles promote or inhibit amyloid fibrillation. We have functionalized gold nanorods with a metal-chelating group to selectively immobilize soluble RepA-WH1, a model synthetic bacterial prionoid, using a hexa-histidine tag (H6). H6-RepA-WH1 undergoes stable amyloid oligomerization in the presence of catalytic concentrations of anisotropic nanoparticles. Then, in a physically separated event, such oligomers promote the growth of amyloid fibers of untagged RepA-WH1. SERS spectral changes of H6-RepA-WH1 on spherical citrate-AuNP substrates provide evidence for structural modifications in the protein, which are compatible with a gradual increase in β-sheet structure, as expected in amyloid oligomerization.


ACS omega | 2016

Intracellular pH-Induced Tip-to-Tip Assembly of Gold Nanorods for Enhanced Plasmonic Photothermal Therapy

Rubén Ahijado-Guzmán; Guillermo González-Rubio; J. G. Izquierdo; L. Bañares; Iván López-Montero; Alicia Calzado-Martín; Montserrat Calleja; G. Tardajos; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez

The search for efficient plasmonic photothermal therapies using nonharmful pulse laser irradiation at the near-infrared (NIR) is fundamental for biomedical cancer research. Therefore, the development of novel assembled plasmonic gold nanostructures with the aim of reducing the applied laser power density to a minimum through hot-spot-mediated cell photothermolysis is an ongoing challenge. We demonstrate that gold nanorods (Au NRs) functionalized at their tips with a pH-sensitive ligand assemble into oligomers within cell lysosomes through hydrogen-bonding attractive interactions. The unique intracellular features of the plasmonic oligomers allow us to significantly reduce the femtosecond laser power density and Au NR dose while still achieving excellent cell killing rates. The formation of gold tip-to-tip oligomers with longitudinal localized surface plasmon resonance bands at the NIR, obtained from low-aspect-ratio Au NRs close in resonance with 800 nm Ti:sapphire 90 fs laser pulses, was found to be the key parameter for realizing the enhanced plasmonic photothermal therapy.


Nature | 2018

Peptides used to make light-twisting nanoparticles

Guillermo González-Rubio; Luis M. Liz-Marzán

The growth of gold nanoparticles has been manipulated using amino acids and peptides to produce twisted structures that alter the rotation of light. The method could simplify the development of optical devices.The growth of gold nanoparticles has been manipulated using amino acids and peptides to produce twisted structures that alter the rotation of light. The method could simplify the development of optical devices.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Large-Scale Plasmonic Pyramidal Supercrystals via Templated Self-Assembly of Monodisperse Gold Nanospheres

Christoph Hanske; Guillermo González-Rubio; Cyrille Hamon; Pilar Formentín; E. B. Modin; Andrey Chuvilin; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez; L.F. Marsal; Luis M. Liz-Marzán


Chemical Communications | 2017

Disentangling the effect of seed size and crystal habit on gold nanoparticle seeded growth

Guillermo González-Rubio; Thais Milagres de Oliveira; Thomas Altantzis; Andrea La Porta; Andrés Guerrero-Martínez; Sara Bals; Leonardo Scarabelli; Luis M. Liz-Marzán


Advanced Functional Materials | 2016

Tunable Nanoparticle and Cell Assembly Using Combined Self‐Powered Microfluidics and Microcontact Printing

Cyrille Hamon; Malou Henriksen-Lacey; Andrea La Porta; Melania Rosique; Judith Langer; Leonardo Scarabelli; Ana Belén Serrano Montes; Guillermo González-Rubio; Marian M. de Pancorbo; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Lourdes Basabe-Desmonts

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Andrés Guerrero-Martínez

Complutense University of Madrid

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G. Tardajos

Complutense University of Madrid

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L. Bañares

Complutense University of Madrid

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Ovidio Peña-Rodríguez

Technical University of Madrid

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Antonio Rivera

Technical University of Madrid

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Jesús González-Izquierdo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Pablo Díaz-Núñez

Technical University of Madrid

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Alejandro Prada

Technical University of Madrid

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Cástor Salgado

Complutense University of Madrid

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