Number concentrationthe number of nanoparticles
in a given
volumeis an important characteristic of any nanoparticle dispersion.
However, its estimation for small nanoparticles (∼30 nm) is
generally challenging. We introduce an absolute and widely applicable
method for analyzing aqueous dispersions of nanoparticles. An innovative
immobilization of nanomaterials in the anisotropically collapsed agarose
gel is pioneered, followed by optical microscopy and nanoparticle
counting. The number of counted nanoparticles is inherently coupled
with sampled volume (517 pL) and translates to the number concentration.
Photon-upconversion, fluorescence, bright-field, and dark-field microscopy
techniques have been proven applicable and used for imaging lanthanide-doped
photon-upconversion nanoparticles, their bioconjugates with antibodies,
silica dye-doped fluorescent nanoparticles, quantum dots, and pure
silica submicron particles. The precision and linearity were characterized
by constructing a dilution series of photon-upconversion nanoparticles.
The limit of detection was 2.0 × 106 mL–1, and the working range was from 4.4 × 107 to 2.2
× 1010 mL–1. The quantification
of nanoparticle clusters was achieved by a thorough analysis of the
micrographs. The accuracy was confirmed using gravimetric analysis
and transmission electron microscopy as a reference. Multiplexed detection
of two nanoparticle types in a mixed dispersion was feasibly demonstrated.
The low thickness of the collapsed gel (<1 μm) supported
extremely sensitive imaging. This was proven by imaging Tm3+-doped photon-upconversion nanoparticles (17 nm hydrodynamic diameter)
with a nanoparticle emission rate of only ∼900 photons/s at
a wavelength of 800 nm (excitation wavelength 976 nm).
Massively parallel
spectroscopy (MPS) of many single nanoparticles
in an aqueous dispersion is reported. As a model system, bioconjugated
photon-upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) with a near-infrared excitation
are prepared. The UCNPs are doped either with Tm3+ (emission
450 and 802 nm) or Er3+ (emission 554 and 660 nm). These
UCNPs are conjugated to biotinylated bovine serum albumin (Tm3+-doped) or streptavidin (Er3+-doped). MPS is correlated
with an ensemble spectra measurement, and the limit of detection (1.6
fmol L–1) and the linearity range (4.8 fmol L–1 to 40 pmol L–1) for bioconjugated
UCNPs are estimated. MPS is used for observing the bioaffinity clustering
of bioconjugated UCNPs. This observation is correlated with a native
electrophoresis and bioaffinity assay on a microtiter plate. A competitive
MPS bioaffinity assay for biotin is developed and characterized with
a limit of detection of 6.6 nmol L–1. MPS from complex
biological matrices (cell cultivation medium) is performed without
increasing background. The compatibility with polydimethylsiloxane
microfluidics is proven by recording MPS from a 30 μm deep microfluidic
channel.
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