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Dive into the research topics where Sha He is active.

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Featured researches published by Sha He.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Direct Evidence for Coupled Surface and Concentration Quenching Dynamics in Lanthanide-Doped Nanocrystals

Noah J. J. Johnson; Sha He; Shuo Diao; Emory M. Chan; Hongjie Dai; Adah Almutairi

Luminescence quenching at high dopant concentrations generally limits the dopant concentration to less than 1-5 mol% in lanthanide-doped materials, and this remains a major obstacle in designing materials with enhanced efficiency/brightness. In this work, we provide direct evidence that the major quenching process at high dopant concentrations is the energy migration to the surface (i.e., surface quenching) as opposed to the common misconception of cross-relaxation between dopant ions. We show that after an inert epitaxial shell growth, erbium (Er3+) concentrations as high as 100 mol% in NaY(Er)F4/NaLuF4 core/shell nanocrystals enhance the emission intensity of both upconversion and downshifted luminescence across different excitation wavelengths (980, 800, and 658 nm), with negligible concentration quenching effects. Our results highlight the strong coupling of concentration and surface quenching effects in colloidal lanthanide-doped nanocrystals, and that inert epitaxial shell growth can overcome concentration quenching. These fundamental insights into the photophysical processes in heavily doped nanocrystals will give rise to enhanced properties not previously thought possible with compositions optimized in bulk.


Biomacromolecules | 2015

Short Soluble Coumarin Crosslinkers for Light-Controlled Release of Cells and Proteins from Hydrogels

Caroline de Gracia Lux; Jacques Lux; Guillaume Collet; Sha He; Minnie Chan; Jason Olejniczak; Alexandra Foucault-Collet; Adah Almutairi

Materials that degrade or dissociate in response to low power light promise to enable on-demand, precisely localized delivery of drugs or bioactive molecules in living systems. Such applications remain elusive because few materials respond to wavelengths that appreciably penetrate tissues. The photocage bromohydroxycoumarin (Bhc) is efficiently cleaved upon low-power ultraviolet (UV) and near-infrared (NIR) irradiation through one- or two-photon excitation, respectively. We have designed and synthesized a short Bhc-bearing crosslinker to create light-degradable hydrogels and nanogels. Our crosslinker breaks by intramolecular cyclization in a manner inspired by the naturally occurring ornithine lactamization, in response to UV and NIR light, enabling rapid degradation of polyacrylamide gels and release of small hydrophilic payloads such as an ∼10 nm model protein and murine mesenchymal stem cells, with no background leakage.


ACS Nano | 2016

Compact Micellization: A Strategy for Ultrahigh T1 Magnetic Resonance Contrast with Gadolinium-Based Nanocrystals

Noah J. J. Johnson; Sha He; Viet Anh Nguyen Huu; Adah Almutairi

Paramagnetic gadolinium (Gd(3+))-based nanocrystals (NCs) with a large number of confined gadolinium ions can be expected to heavily enhance the longitudinal (T1) relaxation of water protons compared to clinical gadolinium complexes with only a single paramagnetic center. However, paramagnetic Gd(3+)-NCs reported to date show only a modest T1 relaxivity of ∼10 mM(-1) s(-1) per Gd(3+) at 1.5 T, only about 3-times higher than clinical Gd(3+) complexes. Here we demonstrate a strategy that achieves ultrahigh T1 relaxivity that is about 25-times higher than clinical Gd(3+) complexes by controlling the proximity of water protons to a paramagnetic NC surface. Using NaGdF4 NCs (∼3 nm) coated with PEG-ylated phospholipid (DSPE-PEG) micelles, we show that the distance of water protons to the NCs surface can be tuned by controlling the NC-micelle sizes. Increasing the ratio of DSPE-PEG to NCs during micellization decreases the size of NC-micelles, enhancing the proximity of water to the NC surface. Using this strategy, we have achieved compact NC-micelles (hydrodynamic diameter, HD ∼ 5 nm) with ultrahigh T1 relaxivity of ∼80 mM(-1) s(-1) per Gd(3+) at 1.41 T. The findings reported here demonstrate a nanostructured Gd(3+)-contrast agent (CA) that simultaneously achieves an ultrahigh T1 relaxivity approaching theoretical predictions, extremely compact size (HD < 5 nm), and a biocompatible surface. Our results show the hitherto unknown ultrahigh T1 relaxation enhancement of water protons in close proximity to a colloidal gadolinium-NC surface that is achievable by precise control of their surface structure.


Nano Letters | 2017

Simultaneous Enhancement of Photoluminescence, MRI Relaxivity, and CT Contrast by Tuning the Interfacial Layer of Lanthanide Heteroepitaxial Nanoparticles

Sha He; Noah J. J. Johnson; Viet Anh Nguyen Huu; Esther Cory; Yuran Huang; Robert L. Sah; Jesse V. Jokerst; Adah Almutairi

Nanoparticle (NP) based exogenous contrast agents assist biomedical imaging by enhancing the target visibility against the background. However, it is challenging to design a single type of contrast agents that are simultaneously suitable for various imaging modalities. The simple integration of different components into a single NP contrast agent does not guarantee the optimized properties of each individual components. Herein, we describe lanthanide-based core-shell-shell (CSS) NPs as triple-modal contrast agents that have concurrently enhanced performance compared to their individual components in photoluminescence (PL) imaging, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and computed tomography (CT). The key to simultaneous enhancement of PL intensity, MRI r1 relaxivity, and X-ray attenuation capability in CT is tuning the interfacial layer in the CSS NP architecture. By increasing the thickness of the interfacial layer, we show that (i) PL intensity is enhanced from completely quenched/dark state to brightly emissive state of both upconversion and downshifting luminescence at different excitation wavelengths (980 and 808 nm), (ii) MRI r1 relaxivity is enhanced by 5-fold from 11.4 to 52.9 mM-1 s-1 (per Gd3+) at clinically relevant field strength 1.5 T, and (iii) the CT Hounsfield Unit gain is 70% higher than the conventional iodine-based agents at the same mass concentration. Our results demonstrate that judiciously designed contrast agents for multimodal imaging can achieve simultaneously enhanced performance compared to their individual stand-alone structures and highlight that multimodality can be achieved without compromising on individual modality performance.


Optics Express | 2016

Enhanced UV upconversion emission using plasmonic nanocavities

Ahmed El Halawany; Sha He; Hossein Hodaei; Ahmed Bakry; M. A. N. Razvi; Ahmed Alshahrie; Noah J. J. Johnson; Demetrios N. Christodoulides; Adah Almutairi; Mercedeh Khajavikhan

Strongly enhanced upconversion emission is experimentally demonstrated from an ensemble of β-NaYF<sub>4</sub>:Gd<sup>3+</sup>/Yb<sup>3+</sup>/Tm<sup>3+</sup> @NaLuF<sub>4</sub> core-shell nanoparticles trapped in judiciously designed plasmonic nanocavities. Using cross-shape silver nanocavities, 170-fold enhancement is obtained at UV band around 345 nm.


Optics Letters | 2014

Engineering upconversion emission spectra using plasmonic nanocavities

Christopher Lantigua; Sha He; Milad Akhlaghi Bouzan; W. E. Hayenga; Noah J. J. Johnson; Adah Almutairi; Mercedeh Khajavikhan

We show that the upconversion emission spectra of Tm³⁺ and Yb³⁺ codoped β-NaYF₄-NaYF₄ core-shell nanoparticles can be judiciously modified by means of plasmonic nanocavities. Our analysis indicates that more than a 30-fold increase in conversion efficiency to the UV spectral band can be expected by engineering the NIR absorption and the local density of states. The effect of the nanocavity on the resulting radiation patterns is discussed. Our results are exemplified in cylindrical cavity geometries.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2017

Review of the progress toward achieving heat confinement—the holy grail of photothermal therapy

Wangzhong Sheng; Sha He; William J. Seare; Adah Almutairi

Photothermal therapy (PTT) involves the application of normally benign light wavelengths in combination with efficient photothermal (PT) agents that convert the absorbed light to heat to ablate selected cancers. The major challenge in PTT is the ability to confine heating and thus direct cellular death to precisely where PT agents are located. The dominant strategy in the field has been to create large libraries of PT agents with increased absorption capabilities and to enhance their delivery and accumulation to achieve sufficiently high concentrations in the tissue targets of interest. While the challenge of material confinement is important for achieving “heat and lethality confinement,” this review article suggests another key prospective strategy to make this goal a reality. In this approach, equal emphasis is placed on selecting parameters of light exposure, including wavelength, duration, power density, and total power supplied, based on the intrinsic properties and geometry of tissue targets that influence heat dissipation, to truly achieve heat confinement. This review highlights significant milestones researchers have achieved, as well as examples that suggest future research directions, in this promising technique, as it becomes more relevant in clinical cancer therapy and other noncancer applications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Increased upconversion quantum yield in plasmonic structures

Ahmed El-Halawany; W. E. Hayenga; Sha He; Christopher Lantigua; Noah J. J. Johnson; Adah Almutairi; Mercedeh Khajavikhan

Upconversion processes have found widespread applications in drug delivery, bio-imaging and solar-cells. In this paper we present a theoretical model that analyzes the impact of a plasmonic shield structure on the quantum yield of upconversion nanoparticles. We use this model to assess the efficiency of NaYF4: Tm3+ Yb3+/NaYF4 core-shell nanoparticles when embedded in a polymer matrix and covered by a metallic can-like structure. We find that as a result of this specific plasmonic structure, the upconversion luminescence from NIR to UV can be increased by a factor of 30.


Chemical Communications | 2015

Light-triggered chemical amplification to accelerate degradation and release from polymeric particles

Jason Olejniczak; Viet Anh Nguyen Huu; Jacques Lux; Madeleine Grossman; Sha He; Adah Almutairi


Chemistry of Materials | 2018

Leveraging Spectral Matching between Photosensitizers and Upconversion Nanoparticles for 808 nm-Activated Photodynamic Therapy

Sha He; Noah J. J. Johnson; Viet Anh Nguyen Huu; Yuran Huang; Adah Almutairi

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Mercedeh Khajavikhan

University of Central Florida

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Christopher Lantigua

University of Central Florida

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Jacques Lux

University of California

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W. E. Hayenga

University of Central Florida

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Ahmed El Halawany

University of Central Florida

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Ahmed El-Halawany

University of Central Florida

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