Nathaniel K. Grady
Rice University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Nathaniel K. Grady.
ACS Nano | 2009
Rizia Bardhan; Nathaniel K. Grady; Joseph R. Cole; Amit Joshi; Naomi J. Halas
Metallic nanoparticles influence the quantum yield and lifetime of adjacent fluorophores in a manner dependent on the properties of the nanostructure. Here we directly compare the fluorescence enhancement of the near-infrared fluorophore IR800 by Au nanoshells (NSs) and Au nanorods (NRs), where human serum albumin (HSA) serves as a spacer layer between the nanoparticle and the fluorophore. Our measurements reveal that the quantum yield of IR800 is enhanced from approximately 7% as an isolated fluorophore to 86% in a NSs-HSA-IR800 complex and 74% in a NRs-HSA-IR800 complex. This dramatic increase in fluorescence shows tremendous potential for contrast enhancement in fluorescence-based bioimaging.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2008
Surbhi Lal; Nathaniel K. Grady; Janardan Kundu; Carly S. Levin; J. Britt Lassiter; Naomi J. Halas
Our understanding of how the geometry of metallic nanostructures controls the properties of their surface plasmons, based on plasmon hybridization, is useful for developing high-performance substrates for surface enhanced spectroscopies. In this tutorial review, we outline the design of metallic nanostructures tailored specifically for providing electromagnetic enhancements for surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). The concepts developed for nanoshell-based substrates can be generalized to other nanoparticle geometries and scaled to other spectroscopies, such as surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRA).
Nano Letters | 2007
Daniel Ward; Nathaniel K. Grady; Carly S. Levin; Naomi J. Halas; Yanpeng Wu; Peter Nordlander; Douglas Natelson
Single-molecule detection with chemical specificity is a powerful and much desired tool for biology, chemistry, physics, and sensing technologies. Surface-enhanced spectroscopies enable single-molecule studies, yet reliable substrates of adequate sensitivity are in short supply. We present a simple, scaleable substrate for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) incorporating nanometer-scale electromigrated gaps between extended electrodes. Molecules in the nanogap active regions exhibit hallmarks of very high Raman sensitivity, including blinking and spectral diffusion. Electrodynamic simulations show plasmonic focusing, giving electromagnetic enhancements approaching those needed for single-molecule SERS.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Oara Neumann; Curtis Feronti; Albert D. Neumann; Anjie Dong; Kevin Schell; Benjamin Lu; Eric S. Kim; Mary Quinn; Shea Thompson; Nathaniel K. Grady; Peter Nordlander; Maria Oden; Naomi J. Halas
The lack of readily available sterilization processes for medicine and dentistry practices in the developing world is a major risk factor for the propagation of disease. Modern medical facilities in the developed world often use autoclave systems to sterilize medical instruments and equipment and process waste that could contain harmful contagions. Here, we show the use of broadband light-absorbing nanoparticles as solar photothermal heaters, which generate high-temperature steam for a standalone, efficient solar autoclave useful for sanitation of instruments or materials in resource-limited, remote locations. Sterilization was verified using a standard Geobacillus stearothermophilus-based biological indicator.
Nano Letters | 2011
Yu Zhang; Nathaniel K. Grady; Ciceron Ayala-Orozco; Naomi J. Halas
Plasmonic nanostructures enable the generation of large electromagnetic fields confined to small volumes, potentially providing a route for the development of nanoengineered nonlinear optical media. A metal-capped hemispherical nanoparticle, also known as a nanocup, generates second harmonic light with increasing intensity as the angle between the incident fundamental beam and the nanocup symmetry axis is increased. Nanoparticle orientation also modifies the emission direction of the second harmonic light. With conversion efficiencies similar to those of inorganic SHG crystals, these structures provide a promising approach for the design and fabrication of stable, synthetic second-order nonlinear optical materials tailored for specific wavelengths.
Nano Letters | 2011
Nche T. Fofang; Nathaniel K. Grady; Zhiyuan Fan; Alexander O. Govorov; Naomi J. Halas
Coherently coupled plasmons and excitons give rise to new optical excitations--plexcitons--due to the strong coupling of these two oscillator systems. Time-resolved studies of J-aggregate-Au nanoshell complexes when the nanoshell plasmon and J-aggregate exciton energies are degenerate probe the dynamical behavior of this coupled system. Transient absorption of the interacting plasmon-exciton system is observed, in dramatic contrast to the photoinduced transmission of the pristine J-aggregate. An additional, transient Fano-shaped modulation within the Fano dip is also observable. The behavior of the J-aggregate-Au nanoshell complex is described by a combined one-exciton and two-exciton state model coupled to the nanoshell plasmon.
ACS Nano | 2010
Rizia Bardhan; Nathaniel K. Grady; Tamer A. Ali; Naomi J. Halas
It is well-known that the geometry of a nanoshell controls the resonance frequencies of its plasmon modes; however, the properties of the core material also strongly influence its optical properties. Here we report the synthesis of Au nanoshells with semiconductor cores of cuprous oxide and examine their optical characteristics. This material system allows us to systematically examine the role of core material on nanoshell optical properties, comparing Cu(2)O core nanoshells (ε(c) ∼ 7) to lower core dielectric constant SiO(2) core nanoshells (ε(c) = 2) and higher dielectric constant mixed valency iron oxide nanoshells (ε(c) = 12). Increasing the core dielectric constant increases nanoparticle absorption efficiency, reduces plasmon line width, and modifies plasmon energies. Modifying the core medium provides an additional means of tailoring both the near- and far-field optical properties in this unique nanoparticle system.
Nano Letters | 2010
Nathaniel K. Grady; Mark W. Knight; Rizia Bardhan; Naomi J. Halas
A nanoparticle separated from a metallic surface by a few-nanometer thick polymer layer forms a nanoscale junction, or nanogap. Illuminating this structure with ultrashort optical pulses, exciting the plasmon resonance, results in a continuous, monitorable collapse of the nanogap. The four-wave mixing signal generated by this illumination of the nanogap provides a simultaneous monitoring of the collapse, increasing dramatically upon gap closure. Collapse is irreversible, occurring with simultaneous ablation of the dielectric from the junction.
Nano Letters | 2005
Chad E. Talley; Joseph B. Jackson; Chris Oubre; Nathaniel K. Grady; Christopher W. Hollars; Stephen M. Lane; Thomas Huser; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas
Nano Letters | 2004
Colleen L. Nehl; Nathaniel K. Grady; Glenn P. Goodrich; Felicia Tam; Naomi J. Halas; Jason H. Hafner