Literature DB >> 31913015

Nanophotonic Platforms for Chiral Sensing and Separation.

Michelle L Solomon1, Amr A E Saleh1,2, Lisa V Poulikakos1, John M Abendroth1, Loza F Tadesse3, Jennifer A Dionne1,4.   

Abstract

Chirality in Nature can be found across all length scales, from the subatomic to the galactic. At the molecular scale, the spatial dissymmetry in the atomic arrangements of pairs of mirror-image molecules, known as enantiomers, gives rise to fascinating and often critical differences in chemical and physical properties. With increasing hierarchical complexity, protein function, cell communication, and organism health rely on enantioselective interactions between molecules with selective handedness. For example, neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases have been linked to distortion of chiral-molecular structure. Moreover, d-amino acids have become increasingly recognized as potential biomarkers, necessitating comprehensive analytical methods for diagnosis that are capable of distinguishing l- from d-forms and quantifying trace concentrations of d-amino acids. Correspondingly, many pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals consist of chiral molecules that target particular enantioselective pathways. Yet, despite the importance of molecular chirality, it remains challenging to sense and to separate chiral compounds. Chiral-optical spectroscopies are designed to analyze the purity of chiral samples, but they are often insensitive to the trace enantiomeric excess that might be present in a patient sample, such as blood, urine, or sputum, or pharmaceutical product. Similarly, existing separation schemes to enable enantiopure solutions of chiral products are inefficient or costly. Consequently, most pharmaceuticals or agrochemicals are sold as racemic mixtures, with reduced efficacy and potential deleterious impacts.Recent advances in nanophotonics lay the foundation toward highly sensitive and efficient chiral detection and separation methods. In this Account, we highlight our group's effort to leverage nanoscale chiral light-matter interactions to detect, characterize, and separate enantiomers, potentially down to the single molecule level. Notably, certain resonant nanostructures can significantly enhance circular dichroism for improved chiral sensing and spectroscopy as well as high-yield enantioselective photochemistry. We first describe how achiral metallic and dielectric nanostructures can be utilized to increase the local optical chirality density by engineering the coupling between electric and magnetic optical resonances. While plasmonic nanoparticles locally enhance the optical chirality density, high-index dielectric nanoparticles can enable large-volume and uniform-sign enhancements in the optical chirality density. By overlapping these electric and magnetic resonances, local chiral fields can be enhanced by several orders of magnitude. We show how these design rules can enable high-yield enantioselective photochemistry and project a 2000-fold improvement in the yield of a photoionization reaction. Next, we discuss how optical forces can enable selective manipulation and separation of enantiomers. We describe the design of low-power enantioselective optical tweezers with the ability to trap sub-10 nm dielectric particles. We also characterize their chiral-optical forces with high spatial and force resolution using combined optical and atomic force microscopy. These optical tweezers exhibit an enantioselective optical force contrast exceeding 10 pN, enabling selective attraction or repulsion of enantiomers based on the illumination polarization. Finally, we discuss future challenges and opportunities spanning fundamental research to technology translation. Disease detection in the clinic as well as pharmaceutical and agrochemical industrial applications requiring large-scale, high-throughput production will gain particular benefit from the simplicity and relative low cost that nanophotonic platforms promise.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 31913015     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00460

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  9 in total

1.  X-ray-Based Techniques to Study the Nano-Bio Interface.

Authors:  Carlos Sanchez-Cano; Ramon A Alvarez-Puebla; John M Abendroth; Tobias Beck; Robert Blick; Yuan Cao; Frank Caruso; Indranath Chakraborty; Henry N Chapman; Chunying Chen; Bruce E Cohen; Andre L C Conceição; David P Cormode; Daxiang Cui; Kenneth A Dawson; Gerald Falkenberg; Chunhai Fan; Neus Feliu; Mingyuan Gao; Elisabetta Gargioni; Claus-C Glüer; Florian Grüner; Moustapha Hassan; Yong Hu; Yalan Huang; Samuel Huber; Nils Huse; Yanan Kang; Ali Khademhosseini; Thomas F Keller; Christian Körnig; Nicholas A Kotov; Dorota Koziej; Xing-Jie Liang; Beibei Liu; Sijin Liu; Yang Liu; Ziyao Liu; Luis M Liz-Marzán; Xiaowei Ma; Andres Machicote; Wolfgang Maison; Adrian P Mancuso; Saad Megahed; Bert Nickel; Ferdinand Otto; Cristina Palencia; Sakura Pascarelli; Arwen Pearson; Oula Peñate-Medina; Bing Qi; Joachim Rädler; Joseph J Richardson; Axel Rosenhahn; Kai Rothkamm; Michael Rübhausen; Milan K Sanyal; Raymond E Schaak; Heinz-Peter Schlemmer; Marius Schmidt; Oliver Schmutzler; Theo Schotten; Florian Schulz; A K Sood; Kathryn M Spiers; Theresa Staufer; Dominik M Stemer; Andreas Stierle; Xing Sun; Gohar Tsakanova; Paul S Weiss; Horst Weller; Fabian Westermeier; Ming Xu; Huijie Yan; Yuan Zeng; Ying Zhao; Yuliang Zhao; Dingcheng Zhu; Ying Zhu; Wolfgang J Parak
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2021-03-02       Impact factor: 15.881

Review 2.  Template-assisted self-assembly of achiral plasmonic nanoparticles into chiral structures.

Authors:  David Vila-Liarte; Nicholas A Kotov; Luis M Liz-Marzán
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2021-09-28       Impact factor: 9.825

3.  Local Growth Mediated by Plasmonic Hot Carriers: Chirality from Achiral Nanocrystals Using Circularly Polarized Light.

Authors:  Lucas V Besteiro; Artur Movsesyan; Oscar Ávalos-Ovando; Seunghoon Lee; Emiliano Cortés; Miguel A Correa-Duarte; Zhiming M Wang; Alexander O Govorov
Journal:  Nano Lett       Date:  2021-12-03       Impact factor: 11.189

Review 4.  Shining light on chiral inorganic nanomaterials for biological issues.

Authors:  Yining Shao; Guilin Yang; Jiaying Lin; Xiaofeng Fan; Yue Guo; Wentao Zhu; Ying Cai; Huiyu Huang; Die Hu; Wei Pang; Yanjun Liu; Yiwen Li; Jiaji Cheng; Xiaoqian Xu
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2021-09-07       Impact factor: 11.556

5.  Planar Chirality and Optical Spin-Orbit Coupling for Chiral Fabry-Perot Cavities.

Authors:  Jérôme Gautier; Minghao Li; Thomas W Ebbesen; Cyriaque Genet
Journal:  ACS Photonics       Date:  2022-02-14       Impact factor: 7.529

6.  Identification of Single Amino Acid Chiral and Positional Isomers Using an Electrostatically Asymmetric Nanopore.

Authors:  Jiajun Wang; Jigneshkumar Dahyabhai Prajapati; Fan Gao; Yi-Lun Ying; Ulrich Kleinekathöfer; Mathias Winterhalter; Yi-Tao Long
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2022-08-11       Impact factor: 16.383

7.  Optical emissivity dataset of multi-material heterogeneous designs generated with automated figure extraction.

Authors:  Viktoriia Baibakova; Mahmoud Elzouka; Sean Lubner; Ravi Prasher; Anubhav Jain
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 8.501

Review 8.  Chiroptical Metasurfaces: Principles, Classification, and Applications.

Authors:  Joohoon Kim; Ahsan Sarwar Rana; Yeseul Kim; Inki Kim; Trevon Badloe; Muhammad Zubair; Muhammad Qasim Mehmood; Junsuk Rho
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-26       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 9.  Nanophotonic biosensors harnessing van der Waals materials.

Authors:  Sang-Hyun Oh; Hatice Altug; Xiaojia Jin; Tony Low; Steven J Koester; Aleksandar P Ivanov; Joshua B Edel; Phaedon Avouris; Michael S Strano
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-06-22       Impact factor: 14.919

  9 in total

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