Tag Archives: gold nanospheres

Nova Scotia’s (Canada) Sona Nanotech and its gold nanoparticles move

I hope one day to have at least one piece on nanotechnology for each province, the Yukon, and the territories. Unfortunately, today (Nov. 2, 2016) will not be the day I add one previously unsung province, etc. to the list as Nova Scotia has previously graced this blog with a nanotechnology story (my June 5, 2016 posting).

The latest nano news from Nova Scotia is found in a Nov. 1, 2016 article by James Risdon for the Chronicle Herald,

A Nova Scotia biotech startup with big plans for its super-small, non-toxic gold particles is looking to move its lab facilities to Halifax and expand.

Andrew McLeod, Sona Nanotech Ltd.’s president and chief operating officer, said Tuesday the company is already looking for lab space in Halifax and wants to hire three additional employees to handle production, research and business development.

Sona Nanotech has two products, its Gemini and Omni gold particles, intended to be used in the health-care industry for such things as the treatment of cancer and diagnostic testing.

These particles are measured in nanometres.

“You’re talking about something that’s on the order of millionths of the width of a human hair,” said McLeod. [The comparison measurements I’ve seen most frequestion for a single nanometre is 1/50,000 or 1/60,000 or 1/100,000 of a hair.]

While other players make gold particles, Sona Nanotech has developed a way to make its products so that they are free of a toxic chemical ,and that’s opening doors for the Nova Scotia startup whose products can be used inside the human body.

There’s already talk of Sona Nanotech teaming up with an as-yet-unnamed Canadian organization for a cancer research project, but McLeod was tight-lipped about the details.

Congratulations to Sona Nano!

For anyone curious about the business aspects of the story, I recommend reading Risdon’s article in its entirety.

Sona Nanotech’s website can be found here,

Sona Nanotech Ltd. has leveraged its team’s unique knowledge and experience with novel surface chemistry methods and surfactants to create a disruptive leap forward in metallic nanoparticle technology.

Co-founders Dr. Gerrard Marangoni, Dr. Kulbir Singh, and Dr. Michael McAlduff recognized the role that gold nanoparticles can play in a variety of life sciences applications, e.g.,  in-vivo 3-D imaging, GNR-enabled diagnostic test products and other cutting edge medical applications.  Gold nanorods can be enabling technologies for non-invasive targeted cell, tumor, tissue and organ treatments such as photothermal cancer cell destruction, and location specific drug and pain treatment.

The Problem
Gold nanorods have been made to date with toxic CTAB [cationic surfactant cethyltrimetylammonium bromide] which makes them much less attractive for in-vivo medical applications.

The Solution
100% CTAB-FREE – Gemini™ and Omni™ Patent-Pending Gold Nanorods – from Sona Nanotech Ltd.

The Problem
For a given colour contrast, large gold nanospheres are not as stable or mobile as gold nanorods (dip tests).

The Solution
Stable, high loading capacity GNRs [gold nanorods] from Sona Nanotech offer a broad range of rich, high contrast test color options.

So, there you have it.

There’s more than one black gold

‘Black gold’ is a phrase I associate with oil, signifying its importance and desirability. These days, this analogic phrase can describe a material according to a July 24, 2015 news item on Nanowerk,

If colloidal gold [gold in solution] self-assembles into the form of larger vesicles, a three-dimensional state can be achieved that is called “black gold” because it absorbs almost the entire spectrum of visible light. How this novel intense plasmonic state can be established and what its characteristics and potential medical applications are is explored by Chinese scientists and reported in the journal Angewandte Chemie …

A July 24, 2015 Wiley (Angewandte Chemie) press release, which originated the news item, provides more details,

Metal nanostructures can self-assemble into superstructures that offer intriguing new spectroscopic and mechanical properties. Plasmonic coupling plays a particular role in this context. For example, it has been found that plasmonic metal nanoparticles help to scatter the incoming light across the surface of the Si substrate at resonance wavelengths, therefore enhancing the light absorbing potential and thus the effectivity of solar cells.

On the other hand, plasmonic vesicles are the promising theranostic platform for biomedical applications, a notion which inspired Yue Li and Cuncheng Li of the Chinese Academy of Science, Hefei, China, and the University of Jinan, China, as well as collaborators to prepare plasmonic colloidosomes composed of gold nanospheres.

As the method of choice, the scientists have designed an emulsion-templating approach based on monodispersed gold nanospheres as building blocks, which arranged themselves into large spherical vesicles in a reverse emulsion system.

The resulting plasmonic vesicles were of micrometer-size and had a shell composed of hexagonally close-packed colloidal nanosphere particles in bilayer or, for the very large superspheres, multilayer arrangement, which provided the enhanced stability.

“A key advantage of this system is that such self-assembly can avoid the introduction of complex stabilization processes to lock the nanoparticles together”, the authors explain.

The hollow spheres exhibited an intense plasmonic resonance in their three-dimensionally packed structure and had a dark black appearance compared to the brick red color of the original gold nanoparticles. The “black gold” was thus characterized by a strong broadband absorption in the visible light and a very regular vesicle superstructure. In medicine, gold vesicles are intensively discussed as vehicles for the drug delivery to tumor cells, and, therefore, it could be envisaged to exploit the specific light-matter interaction of such plasmonic vesicle structures for medical use, but many other applications are also feasible, as the authors propose: “The presented strategy will pave a way to achieve noble-metal superstructures for biosensors, drug delivery, photothermal therapy, optical microcavity, and microreaction platforms.” This will prove the flexibility and versatility of the noble-metal nanostructures.

Here’s a link to and a citation for the paper,

Black Gold: Plasmonic Colloidosomes with Broadband Absorption Self-Assembled from Monodispersed Gold Nanospheres by Using a Reverse Emulsion System by Dilong Liu, Dr. Fei Zhou, Cuncheng Li, Tao Zhang, Honghua Zhang, Prof. Weiping Cai, and Prof. Yue Li. Angewandte Chemie International Edition Article first published online: 25 JUN 2015 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201503384

© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

This article is behind a paywall.

There is an image illustrating the work but, sadly, the gold doesn’t look black,

BlackGold

© Wiley-VCH

That’s it!