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Keywords = nanothermometry

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22 pages, 3453 KB  
Review
Diamond Sensor Technologies: From Multi Stimulus to Quantum
by Pak San Yip, Tiqing Zhao, Kefan Guo, Wenjun Liang, Ruihan Xu, Yi Zhang and Yang Lu
Micromachines 2026, 17(1), 118; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17010118 - 16 Jan 2026
Abstract
This review explores the variety of diamond-based sensing applications, emphasizing their material properties, such as high Young’s modulus, thermal conductivity, wide bandgap, chemical stability, and radiation hardness. These diamond properties give excellent performance in mechanical, pressure, thermal, magnetic, optoelectronic, radiation, biosensing, quantum, and [...] Read more.
This review explores the variety of diamond-based sensing applications, emphasizing their material properties, such as high Young’s modulus, thermal conductivity, wide bandgap, chemical stability, and radiation hardness. These diamond properties give excellent performance in mechanical, pressure, thermal, magnetic, optoelectronic, radiation, biosensing, quantum, and other applications. In vibration sensing, nano/poly/single-crystal diamond resonators operate from MHz to GHz frequencies, with high quality factor via CVD growth, diamond-on-insulator techniques, and ICP etching. Pressure sensing uses boron-doped piezoresistive, as well as capacitive and Fabry–Pérot readouts. Thermal sensing merges NV nanothermometry, single-crystal resonant thermometers, and resistive/diode sensors. Magnetic detection offers FeGa/Ti/diamond heterostructures, complementing NV. Optoelectronic applications utilize DUV photodiodes and color centers. Radiation detectors benefit from diamond’s neutron conversion capability. Biosensing leverages boron-doped diamond and hydrogen-terminated SGFETs, as well as gas targets such as NO2/NH3/H2 via surface transfer doping and Pd Schottky/MIS. Imaging uses AFM/NV probes and boron-doped diamond tips. Persistent challenges, such as grain boundary losses in nanocrystalline diamond, limited diamond-on-insulator bonding yield, high temperature interface degradation, humidity-dependent gas transduction, stabilization of hydrogen termination, near-surface nitrogen-vacancy noise, and the cost of high-quality single-crystal diamond, are being addressed through interface and surface chemistry control, catalytic/dielectric stack engineering, photonic integration, and scalable chemical vapor deposition routes. These advances are enabling integrated, high-reliability diamond sensors for extreme and quantum-enhanced applications. Full article
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11 pages, 2283 KB  
Article
Multimodal Magnetic Nanoparticle–Quantum Dot Composites
by Kareem Ouhalla Knipschild, Vera Kuznetsova, Aoife Kavanagh, Finn Huonder, Caroline O’Sullivan, Amy Clayton, Yaroslav Kryuchkov, Lorenzo Branzi and Yurii K. Gun’ko
Nanomaterials 2025, 15(24), 1853; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15241853 - 10 Dec 2025
Viewed by 417
Abstract
Multimodal nanocomposites that combine optical and magnetic functionalities are of great interest for applications such as imaging and temperature sensing. Ternary CuInS2 (CIS)-based quantum dots (QDs) offer low toxicity, strong near-infrared (NIR) emission, and high photostability, making them promising for optical nanothermometry [...] Read more.
Multimodal nanocomposites that combine optical and magnetic functionalities are of great interest for applications such as imaging and temperature sensing. Ternary CuInS2 (CIS)-based quantum dots (QDs) offer low toxicity, strong near-infrared (NIR) emission, and high photostability, making them promising for optical nanothermometry and imaging. In this study, CIS QDs were synthesized using an aqueous cysteine-mediated approach. Manganese ferrite (MnFe2O4) nanoparticles were prepared as the magnetic component due to their non-toxicity and superparamagnetic properties. To integrate both functionalities, QDs and magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) were encapsulated in silica and then combined to form multimodal CIS/MnFe2O4/SiO2 nanocomposites. The structure and morphology of the materials were characterized by TEM and XRD, while their optical properties were examined using UV–Vis, photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. This design ensured optical isolation, preventing fluorescence quenching while maintaining colloidal stability. The obtained composites exhibited PL in the NIR region and a thermosensitivity of 2.04%/°C. TEM analysis confirmed uniform silica shell formation and successful integration of both components within the composite. The materials also retained the superparamagnetic behavior of MnFe2O4, making them suitable for combined optical and magnetic functionalities. These results demonstrate the potential of CIS/MnFe2O4/SiO2 nanocomposites as multifunctional platforms for optical imaging, temperature monitoring, and magnetically modulated effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biology and Medicines)
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35 pages, 2320 KB  
Review
Thermodynamic Biomarkers of Neuroinflammation: Nanothermometry, Energy–Stress Dynamics, and Predictive Entropy in Glial–Vascular Networks
by Valentin Titus Grigorean, Adrian Vasile Dumitru, Catalina-Ioana Tataru, Matei Serban, Alexandru Vlad Ciurea, Octavian Munteanu, Mugurel Petrinel Radoi, Razvan-Adrian Covache-Busuioc, Ariana-Stefana Cosac and George Pariza
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(22), 11022; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms262211022 - 14 Nov 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 948
Abstract
Homeostasis, which supports and maintains brain function, results from the continuous regulation of thermodynamics within tissue: the balance of heat production, redox oscillations, and vascular convection regulates coherent energy flow within the organ. Neuroinflammation disturbs this balance, creating measurable entropy gradients that precede [...] Read more.
Homeostasis, which supports and maintains brain function, results from the continuous regulation of thermodynamics within tissue: the balance of heat production, redox oscillations, and vascular convection regulates coherent energy flow within the organ. Neuroinflammation disturbs this balance, creating measurable entropy gradients that precede structural damage to its tissue components. This paper proposes that a thermodynamic unity can be devised that incorporates nanoscale physics, energetic neurophysiology, and systems neuroscience, and can be used to understand and treat neuroinflammatory processes. Using multifactorial modalities such as quantum thermometry, nanoscale calorimetry, and redox oscillometry we define how local entropy production (st), relaxation time (τR), and coherence lengths (λc) allow quantification of the progressive loss of energetic symmetry within neural tissues. It is these variables that provide the basis for the etiology of thermodynamic biomarkers which on a molecular-redox-to-network scale characterize the transitions governing the onset of the neuroinflammatory process as well as the recovery potential of the organism. The entropic probing of systems (PEP) further allows the translation of these parameters into dynamic patient-specific trajectories that model the behavior of individuals by predicting recurrent bouts of instability through the application of machine learning algorithms to the vectors of entropy flux. The parallel development of the nanothermodynamic intervention, which includes thermoplasmonic heat rebalancing, catalytic redox nanoreacting systems, and adaptive field-oscillation synchronicity, shows by example how the corrections that can be applied to the entropy balance of the cell and system as a whole offer a feasible form of restoration of energy coherence. Such closed loop therapy would not function by the suppression of inflammatory signaling, but rather by the re-establishment of reversible energy relations between mitochondrial, glial, and vascular territories. The combination of these factors allows for correction of neuroinflammation, which can now be viewed from a fresh perspective as a dynamic phase disorder that is diagnosable, predictable, and curable through the physics of coherence rather than the molecular suppression of inflammatory signaling. The significance of this set of ideas is considerable as it introduces a feasible and verifiable structure to what must ultimately become the basis of a new branch of science: predictive energetic medicine. It is anticipated that entropy, as a measurable and modifiable variable in therapeutic “inscription”, will be found to be one of the most significant parameters determining the neurorestoration potential in future medical science. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Neuroinflammation: From Molecular Mechanisms to Therapy)
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15 pages, 2022 KB  
Article
Dual-Emission Au-Ag Nanoclusters with Enhanced Photoluminescence and Thermal Sensitivity for Intracellular Ratiometric Nanothermometry
by Helin Liu, Zhongliang Zhou, Zhiwei Wang, Jianhai Wang, Yu Wang, Lu Huang, Tianhuan Guo, Rongcheng Han and Yuqiang Jiang
Biosensors 2025, 15(8), 510; https://doi.org/10.3390/bios15080510 - 6 Aug 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1072
Abstract
We report the development of highly luminescent, bovine serum albumin (BSA)-stabilized gold–silver bimetallic nanoclusters (Au-AgNCs@BSA) as a novel platform for high-sensitivity, ratiometric intracellular temperature sensing. Precise and non-invasive temperature sensing at the nanoscale is crucial for applications ranging from intracellular thermogenesis monitoring to [...] Read more.
We report the development of highly luminescent, bovine serum albumin (BSA)-stabilized gold–silver bimetallic nanoclusters (Au-AgNCs@BSA) as a novel platform for high-sensitivity, ratiometric intracellular temperature sensing. Precise and non-invasive temperature sensing at the nanoscale is crucial for applications ranging from intracellular thermogenesis monitoring to localized hyperthermia therapies. Traditional luminescent thermometric platforms often suffer from limitations such as high cytotoxicity and low photostability. Here, we synthesized Au-AgNCs@BSA via a one-pot aqueous reaction, achieving significantly enhanced photoluminescence quantum yields (PL QYs, up to 18%) and superior thermal responsiveness compared to monometallic counterparts. The dual-emissive Au-AgNCs@BSA exhibit a linear ratiometric fluorescence response to temperature fluctuations within the physiological range (20–50 °C), enabling accurate and concentration-independent thermometry in live cells. Time-resolved PL and Arrhenius analyses reveal two distinct emissive states and a high thermal activation energy (Ea = 199 meV), indicating strong temperature dependence. Silver doping increases radiative decay rates while maintaining low non-radiative losses, thus amplifying fluorescence intensity and thermal sensitivity. Owing to their small size, excellent photostability, and low cytotoxicity, these nanoclusters were applied to non-invasive intracellular temperature mapping, presenting a promising luminescent nanothermometer for real-time cellular thermogenesis monitoring and advanced bioimaging applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nano- and Micro-Technologies in Biosensors)
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26 pages, 10223 KB  
Article
Silver–Titania Nanocomposites for Photothermal Applications
by Leonardo Bottacin, Roberto Zambon, Francesca Tajoli, Veronica Zani, Roberto Pilot, Naida El Habra, Silvia Gross and Raffaella Signorini
Gels 2025, 11(6), 461; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11060461 - 16 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1082
Abstract
Local temperature measurement is crucial for understanding nanoscale thermal transport and developing nanodevices for biomedical, photonic, and optoelectronic applications. The rise of photothermal therapy for cancer treatment has increased the demand for high-resolution nanothermometric techniques capable of non-contact intracellular temperature measurement and modification. [...] Read more.
Local temperature measurement is crucial for understanding nanoscale thermal transport and developing nanodevices for biomedical, photonic, and optoelectronic applications. The rise of photothermal therapy for cancer treatment has increased the demand for high-resolution nanothermometric techniques capable of non-contact intracellular temperature measurement and modification. Raman spectroscopy meets this need: the ratio of anti-Stokes to Stokes Raman intensities for a specific vibrational mode correlates with local temperature through the Boltzmann distribution. The present study proposes a novel photothermal therapy agent designed to advance the current state of the art while adhering to green chemistry principles, thereby favoring low-temperature synthesis involving limited energy consumption. A key challenge in this field is to achieve close contact between plasmonic nanosystems, which act as nanoheaters, and local temperature sensors. This is achieved by employing silver nanoparticles as a heat release agent, coated with anatase-phase titanium dioxide, as a local temperature sensor. The proposed synthesis, which combines refluxing and subcritical solvothermal treatments, enables direct anatase formation, despite its metastability under standard conditions, thus eliminating the need for a calcination step. Structural characterization through SAED-HRTEM and Raman spectroscopy confirms the successful crystallization of the desired phase. Moreover, the nanothermometry measurements conducted at various wavelengths ultimately demonstrate both the effectiveness of these nanomaterials as thermometric probes, with a relative sensitivity of about 0.24 K−1%, and their capability as local heaters, with a release of a few tens of degrees. This work demonstrates a new synthetic strategy for these nanocomposites, which offers a promising pathway for the optimization of nanosystems in therapeutic applications. Full article
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14 pages, 4940 KB  
Article
Near-Infrared Multiwavelength Raman Anti-Stokes/Stokes Thermometry of Titanium Dioxide
by Veronica Zani, Roberto Pilot, Danilo Pedron and Raffaella Signorini
Chemosensors 2024, 12(9), 191; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors12090191 - 17 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2542
Abstract
The use of multiple wavelengths to excite Titanium Dioxide Raman scattering in the near-infrared was investigated for optical nanothermometry. Indeed, Raman spectroscopy can be a very interesting technique for this purpose, as it offers non-disruptive contactless measurements with a high spatial resolution, down [...] Read more.
The use of multiple wavelengths to excite Titanium Dioxide Raman scattering in the near-infrared was investigated for optical nanothermometry. Indeed, Raman spectroscopy can be a very interesting technique for this purpose, as it offers non-disruptive contactless measurements with a high spatial resolution, down to a few µm. A method based on the ratio between the anti-Stokes and Stokes peaks of Anatase Titanium Dioxide was proposed and tested at three different wavelengths, 785, 800 and 980 nm, falling into the first biological transparency window (BTW-I). Using a temperature-controller stage, the temperature response of the sample was measured between 20 and 50 °C, allowing the thermal sensitivity for this range to be estimated. The use of sufficiently high laser power results in the generation of local heating. A proof of concept of the proposed thermometric method was performed by determining the extent of local heating induced by increasing laser power. By exciting with an 800 nm laser at low power intensities, a temperature equal to room temperature (RT) was found, while a maximum temperature increase of 15 °C was detected using the anti-Stokes/Stokes method. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Optical Chemo- and Biosensors)
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20 pages, 4513 KB  
Article
Novel Photoluminescence and Optical Thermometry of Solvothermally Derived Tetragonal ZrO2:Ti4+,Eu3+ Nanocrystals
by Lu Li, Xuesong Qu, Guo-Hui Pan and Jung Hyun Jeong
Chemosensors 2024, 12(4), 62; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors12040062 - 15 Apr 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2724
Abstract
In this paper, we report on the solvothermal preparation and detailed characterization of pristine and intentionally doped zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) nanocrystals (NCs, ~5 nm) with Eu3+ or Ti4+/Eu3+ ions using alkoxide precursors. The results indicated that the [...] Read more.
In this paper, we report on the solvothermal preparation and detailed characterization of pristine and intentionally doped zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) nanocrystals (NCs, ~5 nm) with Eu3+ or Ti4+/Eu3+ ions using alkoxide precursors. The results indicated that the ZrO2 NCs were dominantly of a tetragonal phase (t-ZrO2) with a small proportion of monoclinic ZrO2 (m-ZrO2). The high purity of t-ZrO2 NCs could be synthesized with more Eu3+ doping. It was found that the as-obtained ZrO2 NCs contain some naturally present Ti4+ ions originating from precursors, but were being overlooked commonly, and some carbon impurities produced during synthesis. These species showed distinct photoluminescence (PL) properties. At least two types of Eu3+, located at low- and high-symmetry sites (probably sevenfold and eightfold oxygen coordination), respectively, were demonstrated to build into the lattice structure of t-ZrO2 NCs together. The cationic dopants were illustrated to be distributed non-randomly over the sites normally occupied by Zr, while Ti impurities preferentially occupied the sites near the low-symmetry site of Eu3+, yielding efficient energy transfer from the titanate groups to the neighboring Eu3+. Luminescence nanothermometry could measure temperature in a non-contact and remote way and could find great potentials in micro/nano-electronics, integrated photonics, and biomedicine. On the basis of the dual-emitting combination strategy involving the white broadband CT (Ti3+→O) emissions of the titanate groups and red sharp Eu3+ emissions, t-ZrO2:Eu3+ nanophosphors were demonstrated to be ratiometric self-referencing optical thermometric materials, with a working range of 130–230 K and a maxima of relative sensitivity of ~1.9% K1 at 230 K. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Optical Chemical Sensors)
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11 pages, 5814 KB  
Article
Multifunctional Core/Shell Diamond Nanoparticles Combining Unique Thermal and Light Properties for Future Biological Applications
by Sergey A. Grudinkin, Kirill V. Bogdanov, Vladimir A. Tolmachev, Mikhail A. Baranov, Ilya E. Kaliya, Valery G. Golubev and Alexander V. Baranov
Nanomaterials 2023, 13(24), 3124; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano13243124 - 12 Dec 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2228
Abstract
We report the development of multifunctional core/shell chemical vapor deposition diamond nanoparticles for the local photoinduced hyperthermia, thermometry, and fluorescent imaging. The diamond core heavily doped with boron is heated due to absorbed laser radiation and in turn heats the shell of a [...] Read more.
We report the development of multifunctional core/shell chemical vapor deposition diamond nanoparticles for the local photoinduced hyperthermia, thermometry, and fluorescent imaging. The diamond core heavily doped with boron is heated due to absorbed laser radiation and in turn heats the shell of a thin transparent diamond layer with embedded negatively charged SiV color centers emitting intense and narrowband zero-phonon lines with a temperature-dependent wavelength near 738 nm. The heating of the core/shell diamond nanoparticle is indicated by the temperature-induced spectral shift in the intensive zero-phonon line of the SiV color centers embedded in the diamond shell. The temperature of the core/shell diamond particles can be precisely manipulated by the power of the incident light. At laser power safe for biological systems, the photoinduced temperature of the core/shell diamond nanoparticles is high enough to be used for hyperthermia therapy and local nanothermometry, while the high zero-phonon line intensity of the SiV color centers allows for the fluorescent imaging of treated areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biological Interactions of Nanomaterials)
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29 pages, 1700 KB  
Review
Warm Cells, Hot Mitochondria: Achievements and Problems of Ultralocal Thermometry
by Alexey G. Kruglov, Alexey M. Romshin, Anna B. Nikiforova, Arina Plotnikova and Igor I. Vlasov
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2023, 24(23), 16955; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242316955 - 29 Nov 2023
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 4377
Abstract
Temperature is a crucial regulator of the rate and direction of biochemical reactions and cell processes. The recent data indicating the presence of local thermal gradients associated with the sites of high-rate thermogenesis, on the one hand, demonstrate the possibility for the existence [...] Read more.
Temperature is a crucial regulator of the rate and direction of biochemical reactions and cell processes. The recent data indicating the presence of local thermal gradients associated with the sites of high-rate thermogenesis, on the one hand, demonstrate the possibility for the existence of “thermal signaling” in a cell and, on the other, are criticized on the basis of thermodynamic calculations and models. Here, we review the main thermometric techniques and sensors developed for the determination of temperature inside living cells and diverse intracellular compartments. A comparative analysis is conducted of the results obtained using these methods for the cytosol, nucleus, endo-/sarcoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria, as well as their biological consistency. Special attention is given to the limitations, possible sources of errors and ambiguities of the sensor’s responses. The issue of biological temperature limits in cells and organelles is considered. It is concluded that the elaboration of experimental protocols for ultralocal temperature measurements that take into account both the characteristics of biological systems, as well as the properties and limitations of each type of sensor is of critical importance for the generation of reliable results and further progress in this field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mitochondrial Function in Health and Disease, 3rd Edition)
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13 pages, 3691 KB  
Article
“Green” Fluorescent–Plasmonic Carbon-Based Nanocomposites with Controlled Performance for Mild Laser Hyperthermia
by Yury V. Ryabchikov and Alexander Zaderko
Photonics 2023, 10(11), 1229; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics10111229 - 3 Nov 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 1692
Abstract
Fluorescent carbon nanodots are a promising nanomaterial for different applications in biophotonics, sensing and optical nanothermometry fields due to their strong fluorescence properties. However, their multi-modal applications are considerably limited, requiring the use of several nanoagents that could solve different tasks simultaneously. In [...] Read more.
Fluorescent carbon nanodots are a promising nanomaterial for different applications in biophotonics, sensing and optical nanothermometry fields due to their strong fluorescence properties. However, their multi-modal applications are considerably limited, requiring the use of several nanoagents that could solve different tasks simultaneously. In this paper, we report the first experimental results on a facile “green” laser-based synthesis of multi-modal carbon–metallic nanocomposites with tuned optical performance. This simple approach leads to the appearance of finely controlled plasmonic properties in carbon-based nanocomposites whose spectral position is adapted by using an appropriate material. Thus, longer laser ablation provokes 29-fold increase in the absorption intensity of carbon–gold nanocomposites due to the increase in the metal content from 13% (30 s) to 53% (600 s). Despite strong plasmonic properties, the metal presence results in the quenching of the carbon nanostructures’ fluorescence (2.4-fold for C-Au NCs and 3.6-fold for C-Ag NCs for 600 s ablation time). Plasmonic nanocomposites with variable metal content reveal a ~3-fold increase in the laser-to-heat conversion efficiency of carbon nanodots matching the temperature range for mild hyperthermia applications. The findings presented demonstrate a facile approach to expanding the properties of chemically prepared semiconductor nanostructures due to the formation of novel semiconductor–metallic nanocomposites using a “green” approach. Together with the ease in control of their performance, it can considerably increase the impact of semiconductor nanomaterials in various photonic, plasmonic and biomedical applications. Full article
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12 pages, 27110 KB  
Article
Silicon Vacancy in Boron-Doped Nanodiamonds for Optical Temperature Sensing
by Masfer Alkahtani
Materials 2023, 16(17), 5942; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16175942 - 30 Aug 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2904
Abstract
Boron-doped nanodiamonds (BNDs) have recently shown a promising potential in hyperthermia and thermoablation therapy, especially in heating tumor cells. To remotely monitor eigen temperature during such operations, diamond color centers have shown a sensitive optical temperature sensing. Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in diamonds [...] Read more.
Boron-doped nanodiamonds (BNDs) have recently shown a promising potential in hyperthermia and thermoablation therapy, especially in heating tumor cells. To remotely monitor eigen temperature during such operations, diamond color centers have shown a sensitive optical temperature sensing. Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in diamonds have shown the best sensitivity in nanothermometry; however, spin manipulation of the NV center with green laser and microwave-frequency excitations is still a huge challenge for biological applications. Silicon-vacancy (SiV) color center in nano/bulk diamonds has shown a great potential to be a good replacement of the NV center in diamond as it can be excited and detected within the biological transparency window and its thermometry operations depends only on its zero-phonon line (ZPL) shift as a function of temperature changes. In this work, BNDs were carefully etched on smooth diamond nanocrystals’ sharp edges and implanted with silicon for optical temperature sensing. Optical temperature sensing using SiV color centers in BNDs was performed over a small range of temperature within the biological temperature window (296–308 K) with an excellent sensitivity of 0.2 K in 10 s integration time. These results indicate that there are likely to be better application of more biocompatible BNDs in hyperthermia and thermoablation therapy using a biocompatible diamond color center. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanocomposites for Functional Applications)
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6 pages, 1494 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Ag/TiO2 Nanocomposites for Nanothermometry in the Biological Environment
by Roberto Zambon, Marina Franca, Veronica Zani, Roberto Pilot, Silvia Gross, Danilo Pedron and Raffaella Signorini
Eng. Proc. 2023, 35(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/IECB2023-14585 - 8 May 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1345
Abstract
Local temperature determination is essential to understand heat transport phenomena at the nanoscale and to design nanodevices for biomedical, photonic, and optoelectronic applications. In particular, the detection of the local temperature of the intracellular environment is interesting for photothermal therapy. In the present [...] Read more.
Local temperature determination is essential to understand heat transport phenomena at the nanoscale and to design nanodevices for biomedical, photonic, and optoelectronic applications. In particular, the detection of the local temperature of the intracellular environment is interesting for photothermal therapy. In the present work, nanoparticles consisting of an Ag core, covered by a TiO2 shell and Ag@TiO2 core–shell, were suitably synthesized through a one-pot method. Silver nanoparticles synthesized in DMF were coated by controlled hydrolysis of titanium tetrabutoxide in the same reaction environment. The synthesis led to nanocomposites where AgNPs were covered by a diffuse layer of anatase. The nanocomposites were characterized using UV/Vis spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. The samples obtained proved to be good Raman nanothermometers with a sensitivity comparable to that of simple anatase nanoparticles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of The 3rd International Electronic Conference on Biosensors)
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20 pages, 2734 KB  
Article
Magneto-Induced Hyperthermia and Temperature Detection in Single Iron Oxide Core-Silica/Tb3+/Eu3+(Acac) Shell Nano-Objects
by Karina Nigoghossian, Basile Bouvet, Gautier Félix, Saad Sene, Luca Costa, Pierre-Emmanuel Milhet, Albano N. Carneiro Neto, Luis D. Carlos, Erwan Oliviero, Yannick Guari and Joulia Larionova
Nanomaterials 2022, 12(18), 3109; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12183109 - 7 Sep 2022
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3020
Abstract
Multifunctional nano-objects containing a magnetic heater and a temperature emissive sensor in the same nanoparticle have recently emerged as promising tools towards personalized nanomedicine permitting hyperthermia-assisted treatment under local temperature control. However, a fine control of nano-systems’ morphology permitting the synthesis of a [...] Read more.
Multifunctional nano-objects containing a magnetic heater and a temperature emissive sensor in the same nanoparticle have recently emerged as promising tools towards personalized nanomedicine permitting hyperthermia-assisted treatment under local temperature control. However, a fine control of nano-systems’ morphology permitting the synthesis of a single magnetic core with controlled position of the sensor presents a main challenge. We report here the design of new iron oxide core–silica shell nano-objects containing luminescent Tb3+/Eu3+-(acetylacetonate) moieties covalently anchored to the silica surface, which act as a promising heater/thermometer system. They present a single magnetic core and a controlled thickness of the silica shell, permitting a uniform spatial distribution of the emissive nanothermometer relative to the heat source. These nanoparticles exhibit the Tb3+ and Eu3+ characteristic emissions and suitable magnetic properties that make them efficient as a nanoheater with a Ln3+-based emissive self-referencing temperature sensor covalently coupled to it. Heating capacity under an alternating current magnetic field was demonstrated by thermal imaging. This system offers a new strategy permitting a rapid heating of a solution under an applied magnetic field and a local self-referencing temperature sensing with excellent thermal sensitivity (1.64%·K−1 (at 40 °C)) in the range 25–70 °C, good photostability, and reproducibility after several heating cycles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Luminescent Colloidal Nanocrystals)
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13 pages, 2712 KB  
Review
Thermal Probing Techniques for a Single Live Cell
by Nana Yang, Jingjing Xu, Fan Wang, Fan Yang, Danhong Han and Shengyong Xu
Sensors 2022, 22(14), 5093; https://doi.org/10.3390/s22145093 - 7 Jul 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3521
Abstract
Temperature is a significant factor in determining and characterizing cellular metabolism and other biochemical activities. In this study, we provide a brief overview of two important technologies used to monitor the local temperatures of individual living cells: fluorescence nano-thermometry and an array of [...] Read more.
Temperature is a significant factor in determining and characterizing cellular metabolism and other biochemical activities. In this study, we provide a brief overview of two important technologies used to monitor the local temperatures of individual living cells: fluorescence nano-thermometry and an array of micro-/nano-sized thin-film thermocouples. We explain some key technical issues that must be addressed and optimised for further practical applications, such as in cell biology, drug selection, and novel antitumor therapy. We also offer a method for combining them into a hybrid measuring system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue State-of-the-Art Biosensors Technology in China 2020–2021)
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29 pages, 11743 KB  
Review
Nanoparticle-Mediated Photothermal Therapy Limitation in Clinical Applications Regarding Pain Management
by Marzieh Salimi, Sara Mosca, Benjamin Gardner, Francesca Palombo, Pavel Matousek and Nicholas Stone
Nanomaterials 2022, 12(6), 922; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12060922 - 10 Mar 2022
Cited by 60 | Viewed by 7791
Abstract
The development of new effective cancer treatment methods has attracted much attention, mainly due to the limited efficacy and considerable side effects of currently used cancer treatment methods such as radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Photothermal therapy based on the use of plasmonically resonant [...] Read more.
The development of new effective cancer treatment methods has attracted much attention, mainly due to the limited efficacy and considerable side effects of currently used cancer treatment methods such as radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Photothermal therapy based on the use of plasmonically resonant metallic nanoparticles has emerged as a promising technique to eradicate cancer cells selectively. In this method, plasmonic nanoparticles are first preferentially uptaken by a tumor and then selectively heated by exposure to laser radiation with a specific plasmonic resonant wavelength, to destroy the tumor whilst minimizing damage to adjacent normal tissue. However, several parameters can limit the effectiveness of photothermal therapy, resulting in insufficient heating and potentially leading to cancer recurrence. One of these parameters is the patient’s pain sensation during the treatment, if this is performed without use of anesthetic. Pain can restrict the level of applicable laser radiation, cause an interruption to the treatment course and, as such, affect its efficacy, as well as leading to a negative patient experience and consequential general population hesitancy to this type of therapy. Since having a comfortable and painless procedure is one of the important treatment goals in the clinic, along with its high effectiveness, and due to the relatively low number of studies devoted to this specific topic, we have compiled this review. Moreover, non-invasive and painless methods for temperature measurement during photothermal therapy (PTT), such as Raman spectroscopy and nanothermometry, will be discussed in the following. Here, we firstly outline the physical phenomena underlying the photothermal therapy, and then discuss studies devoted to photothermal cancer treatment concerning pain management and pathways for improved efficiency of photothermal therapy whilst minimizing pain experienced by the patient. Full article
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