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Dive into the research topics where Nicole Cathcart is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole Cathcart.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Ultrathin Gold Nanoframes through Surfactant-Free Templating of Faceted Pentagonal Silver Nanoparticles

Matthew McEachran; Dilyn Keogh; Brendan Pietrobon; Nicole Cathcart; Ilya Gourevich; Neil Coombs; Vladimir Kitaev

Ultrathin gold nanoframes (up to 1.6 nm) were prepared via templating upon well-defined faceted silver morphologies. Starting with silver decahedra, small quantities of gold (1-10 mol% relative to the amount of silver) were selectively deposited on the nanoparticle edges under optimized reducing conditions. Silver dissolution in hydrogen peroxide yielded well-defined gold frames that retained their structural integrity in the ultrathin nanowire regime below 2 nm. The frame formation protocol was also successfully applied to other silver nanoparticle shapes featuring pentagonal twinning and (111) facets (e.g., pentagonal faceted rods and icosahedra). The demonstrated approach can be applied in the controlled preparation of ultrathin metal nanowires complementary to lithography and in the production of ultrafine noble-metal nanostructures for catalytic applications.


Langmuir | 2009

Chiral thiol-stabilized silver nanoclusters with well-resolved optical transitions synthesized by a facile etching procedure in aqueous solutions.

Nicole Cathcart; Pretesh Mistry; Christy Makra; Brendan Pietrobon; Neil Coombs; Masoud Jelokhani-Niaraki; Vladimir Kitaev

A novel approach of cyclic reduction in oxidative conditions has been developed to prepare a single dominant species of chiral thiol-stabilized silver nanoclusters (AgNCs). Such AgNCs, which are stable in solution for up to a few days, have been obtained for the first time. The generality of the established procedure is proven by using several enantiomeric water-soluble thiols, including glutathione, as protective ligands. The prepared AgNCs featured prominent optical properties including a single pattern of UV-vis absorption with well-resolved peaks. The chirality of the clusters has been investigated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. CD spectra displayed strong characteristic signatures in the visible range. Tentative identification of the cluster composition is discussed.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Silver nanoparticles with planar twinned defects: effect of halides for precise tuning of plasmon resonance maxima from 400 to >900 nm

Nicole Cathcart; Andrew J. Frank; Vladimir Kitaev

We studied effects of halides on morphology of planar twinned silver nanoparticles and demonstrated application of these effects to precisely tune silver surface plasmon resonance maxima in a broad vis-NIR range using a reliable two-stage modification protocol.


ACS Nano | 2011

Monodisperse hexagonal silver nanoprisms: synthesis via thiolate-protected cluster precursors and chiral, ligand-imprinted self-assembly.

Nicole Cathcart; Vladimir Kitaev

Silver nanoprisms of a predominantly hexagonal shape have been prepared using a ligand combination of a strongly binding thiol, captopril, and charge-stabilizing citrate together with hydrogen peroxide as an oxidative etching agent and a strong base that triggered nanoprism formation. The role of the reagents and their interplay in the nanoprism synthesis is discussed in detail. The beneficial role of chloride ions to attain a high degree of reproducibility and monodispersity of the nanoprisms is elucidated. Control over the nanoprism width, thickness, and, consequently, plasmon resonance in the system has been demonstrated. One of the crucial factors in the nanoprism synthesis was the slow, controlled aggregation of thiolate-stabilized silver nanoclusters as the intermediates. The resulting superior monodispersity (better than ca. 10% standard deviation in lateral size and ca. 15% standard deviation in thickness (<1 nm variation)) and charge stabilization of the produced silver nanoprisms enabled the exploration of the rich diversity of the self-assembled morphologies in the system. Regular columnar assemblies of the self-assembled nanoprisms spanning 2-3 μm in length have been observed. Notably, the helicity of the columnar phases was evident, which can be attributed to the chirality of the strongly binding thiol ligand. Finally, the enhancement of Raman scattering has been observed after oxidative removal of thiolate ligands from the AgNPR surface.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Symmetry Breaking by Surface Blocking: Synthesis of Bimorphic Silver Nanoparticles, Nanoscale Fishes and Apples.

Nicole Cathcart; Vladimir Kitaev

A powerful approach to augment the diversity of well-defined metal nanoparticle (MNP) morphologies, essential for MNP advanced applications, is symmetry breaking combined with seeded growth. Utilizing this approach enabled the formation of bimorphic silver nanoparticles (bi-AgNPs) consisting of two shapes linked by one regrowth point. Bi-AgNPs were formed by using an adsorbing polymer, poly(acrylic acid), PAA, to block the surface of a decahedral AgNP seed and restricting growth of new silver to a single nucleation point. First, we have realized 2-D growth of platelets attached to decahedra producing nanoscale shapes reminiscent of apples, fishes, mushrooms and kites. 1-D bimorphic growth of rods (with chloride) and 3-D bimorphic growth of cubes and bipyramids (with bromide) were achieved by using halides to induce preferential (100) stabilization over (111) of platelets. Furthermore, the universality of the formation of bimorphic nanoparticles was demonstrated by using different seeds. Bi-AgNPs exhibit strong SERS enhancement due to regular cavities at the necks. Overall, the reported approach to symmetry breaking and bimorphic nanoparticle growth offers a powerful methodology for nanoscale shape design.


Nanoscale | 2016

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering measurement from a lipid bilayer encapsulating a single decahedral nanoparticle mediated by an optical trap

Amanda J. Wright; Joanna L. Richens; Jonathan P. Bramble; Nicole Cathcart; Vladimir Kitaev; Paul O'Shea; A.J. Hudson

We present a new technique for the study of model membranes on the length-scale of a single nano-sized liposome. Silver decahedral nanoparticles have been encapsulated by a model unilamellar lipid bilayer creating nano-sized lipid vesicles. The metal core has two roles (i) increasing the polarizability of vesicles, enabling a single vesicle to be isolated and confined in an optical trap, and (ii) enhancing Raman scattering from the bilayer, via the high surface-plasmon field at the sharp vertices of the decahedral particles. Combined this has allowed us to measure a Raman fingerprint from a single vesicle of 50 nm-diameter, containing just ∼104 lipid molecules in a bilayer membrane over a surface area of <0.01 μm2, equivalent to a volume of approximately 1 zepto-litre. Raman scattering is a weak and inefficient process and previous studies have required either a substantially larger bilayer area in order to obtain a detectable signal, or the tagging of lipid molecules with a chromophore to provide an indirect probe of the bilayer. Our approach is fully label-free and bio-compatible and, in the future, it will enable much more localized studies of the heterogeneous structure of lipid bilayers and of membrane-bound components than is currently possible.


Nanoscale | 2016

Synthesis and sensing properties of D5h pentagonal silver star nanoparticles

Nicole Cathcart; Neil Coombs; Ilya Gourevich; Vladimir Kitaev

In this work, we use silver decahedral nanoparticle (AgDeNP) seeds to synthesize pentagonal silver stars (AgStDeNPs) and study the sensing properties of these nanoparticles. The regrowth process of AgStDeNPs is kinetically-controlled, so the purity of the seed NPs is critical to avoid secondary deposition in the highly non-equilibrium reduction. To control the regrowth process, surface blocking with sodium polyacrylate (PANa) was implemented. PANa moderates rough silver nanostructures typically obtained by reduction with ascorbic acid. To modulate polymer binding to the surface and thus to tune surface blocking, pH served as a key synthetic parameter. Under optimal regrowth conditions, new sliver was deposited on the highest energy sites of the decahedra - the vertices of the rims - to yield pentagonal stars. The universality of this regrowth process was established with several different seed particles. The sharpness and size of the stellated tips are tunable by the amount of added silver. Gold deposition onto AgStDeNPs enables the preparation of diverse structures with enhanced stability. Ease of transformation, e.g. rounding, of star branches opens a promising venue for enhanced SPR sensing. Also, AgStDeNPs enable femtomolar detection of 5,5-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) in SERS.


RSC Advances | 2015

Homogeneously magnetically concentrated silver nanoparticles for uniform “hot spots” in surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy

Andrew J. Frank; Alanna McEneny-King; Nicole Cathcart; Vladimir Kitaev

We report reproducible and sensitive surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) detection achieved with a developed nanoparticle platform, Ag&MH. Ag&MH is comprised of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs), as a sensing substrate that is efficiently and uniformly magnetically concentrated with the assistance of maghemite, γ-Fe2O3, nanoparticles (MHNPs). MNHPs were optimized synthetically for minimal charge interactions with AgNPs and low optical absorbance. At sufficiently high concentrations, magnetic maghemite NPs hydrodynamically trap AgNPs and concentrate them on the inner surface of a quartz optical cell to form an Ag&MH SERS substrate for highly reproducible SERS detection. The reproducibility is a combination of several factors contributing to uniform “hot spots”: homogeneous magnetic concentration by gentle hydrodynamic trapping and weak electrostatic interactions of the same-charge nanoparticles and non-close packing of AgNPs, in particular decahedra. Size-uniform silver decahedra nanoparticles (AgJ13NPs) featuring sharp localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) peaks, coupled with minimized optical interference from MHNPs, enable sensitive and reproducible SERS detection, where 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), DTNB, was used as a probe molecule. Reproducibility of independent measurements at nanomolar level was ca. 10% – consistently overcoming the “hot spot” problem through uniform distribution of AgJ13NPs in the Ag&MH SERS substrate. Picomolar concentrations were detected using a simple fiber-optic Raman spectrometer. The developed AgJ13&MH sensing platform is promising for convenient and reproducible SERS detection of analytes in common laboratory settings.


Langmuir | 2018

LSPR Tuning from 470 to 800 nm and Improved Stability of Au–Ag Nanoparticles Formed by Gold Deposition and Rebuilding in the Presence of Poly(styrenesulfonate)

Nicole Cathcart; Jennifer I. L. Chen; Vladimir Kitaev

Stability and precise control over functional properties of metal nanoparticles remain a challenge for the realization of prospective applications. Our described process of shell formation and rebuilding can address both these challenges. Template silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) stabilized by poly(styrenesulfonate) are first transformed with gold deposition, after which the resulting shell rebuilds with the replaced silver. The shell formation and rebuilding are accompanied by large shifts in localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) peak position, which enables LSPR tuning in a range from 470 to 800 nm. Furthermore, chemical stability of Au-AgNPs is significantly improved compared to AgNPs due to gold stability. Silver templates of different shapes and sizes were demonstrated to transform to AuAg composite NPs to further extend the accessible LSPR range tuning. Stabilization of template AgNPs with poly(styrenesulfonate), in contrast to commonly used poly(vinylpyrrolidone), was found to be a key factor for shell rebuilding. The developed Au-AgNPs were shown to be advantageous for surface plasmon resonance (SPR) detection and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) owing to their tunable LSPR and enhanced stability.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010

Silver Nanoclusters: Single-Stage Scaleable Synthesis of Monodisperse Species and Their Chirooptical Properties†

Nicole Cathcart; Vladimir Kitaev

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Andrew J. Frank

Wilfrid Laurier University

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Rachel Keunen

Wilfrid Laurier University

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Paul O'Shea

University of Nottingham

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