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Fabrication of magnetic core @Shell Fe Oxide@ Au nanoparticles for interfacial bioactivity and bio-separation

  • Hye Young Park
  • , Mark J. Schadt
  • , Lingyan Wang
  • , I. Im Stephanie Lim
  • , Peter N. Njoki
  • , Soo Hong Kim
  • , Min Young Jang
  • , Jin Luo
  • , Chuan Jian Zhong
  • State University of New York Binghamton University
  • Institut Pasteur Korea

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

361 Scopus citations

Abstract

The immobilization of proteins on gold-coated magnetic nanoparticles and the subsequent recognition of the targeted proteins provide an effective means for the separation of proteins via application of a magnetic filed. A key challenge is the ability to fabricate such nanoparticles with the desired core-shell nanostructure. In this article, we report findings of the fabrication and characterization of gold-coated iron oxide (Fe2O3 and Fe3O4) core @shell nanoparticles (Fe oxide@Au) toward novel functional biomaterials. A hetero-interparticle coalescence strategy has been demonstrated for fabricating Fe oxide@Au nanoparticles that exhibit controllable sizes ranging from 5 to 100 nm and high monodispersity. Composition and surface analyses have proven that the resulting nanoparticles consist of the Fe2Os core and the Au shell. The magnetically active Fe oxide core and thiolate-active Au shell were shown to be viable for exploiting the Au surface protein-binding reactivity for bioassay and the Fe oxide core magnetism for magnetic bioseparation. These findings are entirely new and could form the basis for fabricating magnetic nanoparticles as biomaterials with tunable size, magnetism, and surface binding properties.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9050-9056
Number of pages7
JournalLangmuir
Volume23
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 14 2007

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