Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Natalia Razgoniaeva is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Natalia Razgoniaeva.


Science | 2016

Direct observation of triplet energy transfer from semiconductor nanocrystals.

Cédric Mongin; Sofia Garakyaraghi; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Mikhail Zamkov; Felix N. Castellano

A different way to put triplets in play Most molecules adopt a singlet spin configuration: All their electrons are arranged in pairs. Unpaired triplet states engage in a variety of useful reactions but are hard to produce. Quantum mechanics dictates that photo-excitation from singlet to triplet states is inefficient. Instead, chemists rely on sensitizers, which populate the triplet states of their neighbors through energy transfer after absorbing light themselves. Mongin et al. now show that certain nanoparticles can act as triplet sensitizers. Science, this issue p. 369 Nanoparticles can channel photoexcitation to surface molecules to instigate spin-state–dependent chemistry in solution. Triplet excitons are pervasive in both organic and inorganic semiconductors but generally remain confined to the material in which they originate. We demonstrated by transient absorption spectroscopy that cadmium selenide semiconductor nanoparticles, selectively excited by green light, engage in interfacial Dexter-like triplet-triplet energy transfer with surface-anchored polyaromatic carboxylic acid acceptors, extending the excited-state lifetime by six orders of magnitude. Net triplet energy transfer also occurs from surface acceptors to freely diffusing molecular solutes, further extending the lifetime while sensitizing singlet oxygen in an aerated solution. The successful translation of triplet excitons from semiconductor nanoparticles to the bulk solution implies that such materials are generally effective surrogates for molecular triplets. The nanoparticles could thereby potentially sensitize a range of chemical transformations that are relevant for fields as diverse as optoelectronics, solar energy conversion, and photobiology.


ACS Nano | 2015

Mapping the exciton diffusion in semiconductor nanocrystal solids.

Natalia Kholmicheva; Pavel Moroz; Ebin Bastola; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Jesus Bocanegra; Martin Shaughnessy; Zack Porach; Dmitriy Khon; Mikhail Zamkov

Colloidal nanocrystal solids represent an emerging class of functional materials that hold strong promise for device applications. The macroscopic properties of these disordered assemblies are determined by complex trajectories of exciton diffusion processes, which are still poorly understood. Owing to the lack of theoretical insight, experimental strategies for probing the exciton dynamics in quantum dot solids are in great demand. Here, we develop an experimental technique for mapping the motion of excitons in semiconductor nanocrystal films with a subdiffraction spatial sensitivity and a picosecond temporal resolution. This was accomplished by doping PbS nanocrystal solids with metal nanoparticles that force the exciton dissociation at known distances from their birth. The optical signature of the exciton motion was then inferred from the changes in the emission lifetime, which was mapped to the location of exciton quenching sites. By correlating the metal-metal interparticle distance in the film with corresponding changes in the emission lifetime, we could obtain important transport characteristics, including the exciton diffusion length, the number of predissociation hops, the rate of interparticle energy transfer, and the exciton diffusivity. The benefits of this approach to device applications were demonstrated through the use of two representative film morphologies featuring weak and strong interparticle coupling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

One-Dimensional Carrier Confinement in “Giant” CdS/CdSe Excitonic Nanoshells

Natalia Razgoniaeva; Pavel Moroz; Mingrui Yang; Darya S. Budkina; Holly Eckard; Marissa Augspurger; Dmitriy Khon; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; Mikhail Zamkov

The emerging generation of quantum dot optoelectronic devices offers an appealing prospect of a size-tunable band gap. The confinement-enabled control over electronic properties, however, requires nanoparticles to be sufficiently small, which leads to a large area of interparticle boundaries in a film. Such interfaces lead to a high density of surface traps which ultimately increase the electrical resistance of a solid. To address this issue, we have developed an inverse energy-gradient core/shell architecture supporting the quantum confinement in nanoparticles larger than the exciton Bohr radius. The assembly of such nanostructures exhibits a relatively low surface-to-volume ratio, which was manifested in this work through the enhanced conductance of solution-processed films. The reported core/shell geometry was realized by growing a narrow gap semiconductor layer (CdSe) on the surface of a wide-gap core material (CdS) promoting the localization of excitons in the shell domain, as was confirmed by ultrafast transient absorption and emission lifetime measurements. The band gap emission of fabricated nanoshells, ranging from 15 to 30 nm in diameter, has revealed a characteristic size-dependent behavior tunable via the shell thickness with associated quantum yields in the 4.4-16.0% range.


ACS Nano | 2017

Tracking the Energy Flow on Nanoscale via Sample-Transmitted Excitation Photoluminescence Spectroscopy

Pavel Moroz; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Yufan He; Gregory Jensen; Holly Eckard; H. Peter Lu; Mikhail Zamkov

Tracking the energy flow in nanoscale materials is an important yet challenging goal. Experimental methods for probing the intermolecular energy transfer (ET) are often burdened by the spectral crosstalk between donor and acceptor species, which complicates unraveling their individual contributions. This issue is particularly prominent in inorganic nanoparticles and biological macromolecules featuring broad absorbing profiles. Here, we demonstrate a general spectroscopic strategy for measuring the ET efficiency between nanostructured or molecular dyes exhibiting a significant donor-acceptor spectral overlap. The reported approach is enabled through spectral shaping of the broadband excitation light with solutions of donor molecules, which inhibits the excitation of respective donor species in the sample. The resulting changes in the acceptor emission induced by the spectral modulation of the excitation beam are then used to determine the quantum efficiency and the rate of ET processes between arbitrary fluorophores (molecules, nanoparticles, polymers) with high accuracy. The feasibility of the reported method was demonstrated using a control donor-acceptor system utilizing a protein-bridged Cy3-Cy5 dye pair and subsequently applied for studying the energy flow in a CdSe560-CdSe600 binary nanocrystal film.


Methods and Applications in Fluorescence | 2018

Improving the spectral resolution in fluorescence microscopy through shaped-excitation imaging

Natalia Razgoniaeva; S Rogers; Pavel Moroz; J Cassidy; Mikhail Zamkov

The visualization of distinct molecular species represents an important challenge of bio-imaging research. In past decades, the development of multicolor fluorescent (FL) labels has greatly improved our ability to track biological analytes, paving the way for important advances in understanding the cell dynamics. It remains challenging, however, to visualize a large number of different fluorephores simultaneously. Owing to a spectrally broad absorption of fluorescent dyes, only up to five color categories can be resolved at once. Here, we demonstrate a general strategy for distinguishing between multiple fluorescent targets in acquired microscopy images with improved accuracy. The present strategy is enabled through spectral shaping of the excitation light with an optical filter that uniquely attenuates the light absorption of each fluorophore in the investigated sample. The resulting emission changes, induced by such excitation modulation, are therefore target-specific and can be used for identifying various fluorescent species. The technique is demonstrated through an accurate identification of 8 different CdSe dyes with absorption maxima spanning the 520-620 spectral range. It is subsequently applied for accurate measurements of the pH balance in buffers emulating a metabolism of tumor cells.


ACS Nano | 2018

Competition of Charge and Energy Transfer Processes in Donor–Acceptor Fluorescence Pairs: Calibrating the Spectroscopic Ruler

Pavel Moroz; Zhicheng Jin; Yuya Sugiyama; D’Andree Lara; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Mingrui Yang; Natalia Kholmicheva; Dmitriy Khon; Hedi Mattoussi; Mikhail Zamkov

Sensing strategies utilizing Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) are widely used for probing biological phenomena. FRET sensitivity to the donor-acceptor distance makes it ideal for measuring the concentration of a known analyte or determining the spatial separation between fluorescent labels in a macromolecular assembly. The difficulty lies in extracting the FRET efficiency from the acceptor-induced quenching of the donor emission, which may contain a significant non-FRET contribution. Here, we demonstrate a general spectroscopic approach for differentiating between charge transfer and energy transfer (ET) processes in donor-acceptor assemblies and apply the developed method for unravelling the FRET/non-FRET contributions in cyanine dye-semiconductor quantum dot (QD) constructs. The present method relies on correlating the amplitude of the acceptor emission to specific changes in the donor excitation profile in order to extract ET-only transfer efficiencies. Quenching of the donor emission is then utilized to determine the non-ET component, tentatively attributed to the charge transfer. We observe that the latter accounts for 50-99% of donor emission quenching in QD-Cy5 and QD-Cy7 systems, stressing the importance of determining the non-FRET efficiency in a spectroscopic ruler and other FRET-based sensing applications.


ACS Nano | 2014

Enhanced lifetime of excitons in nonepitaxial Au/CdS core/shell nanocrystals.

Scott Lambright; Evgeniia Butaeva; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Thomas Hopkins; Bryan Smith; Dimuthu Perera; Jonathan Corbin; Elena Khon; Rebekah Thomas; Pavel Moroz; Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; Mikhail Zamkov


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Photocatalytic Applications of Colloidal Heterostructured Nanocrystals: What's Next?

Natalia Razgoniaeva; Pavel Moroz; Scott Lambright; Mikhail Zamkov


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Exciton Generation in Semiconductor Nanocrystals via the Near-Field Plasmon Energy Transfer

Natalia Razgoniaeva; Scott Lambright; Narayan Sharma; Amit Acharya; Elena Khon; Pavel Moroz; Anton O. Razgoniaev; Alexis D. Ostrowski; Mikhail Zamkov


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Enhanced Emission of Nanocrystal Solids Featuring Slowly Diffusive Excitons

Natalia Kholmicheva; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Priyanka Yadav; Adam Lahey; Christian S. Erickson; Pavel Moroz; Daniel R. Gamelin; Mikhail Zamkov

Collaboration


Dive into the Natalia Razgoniaeva's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mikhail Zamkov

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pavel Moroz

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Natalia Kholmicheva

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amit Acharya

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Narayan Sharma

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott Lambright

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander N. Tarnovsky

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexis D. Ostrowski

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anton O. Razgoniaev

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge