Ultrabright Fluorescent Organic Nanoparticles Based on Small-Molecule Ionic Isolation Lattices**

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Ultrabright fluorescent nanoparticles (NPs) hold great promise for demanding bioimaging applications. Recently, extremely bright molecular crystals of cationic fluorophores were obtained by hierarchical coassembly with cyanostar anion-receptor complexes. These small-molecule ionic isolation lattices (SMILES) ensure spatial and electronic isolation to prohibit aggregation quenching of dyes. We report a simple, one-step supramolecular approach to formulate SMILES materials into NPs. Rhodamine-based SMILES NPs stabilized by glycol amphiphiles show high fluorescence quantum yield (30 %) and brightness per volume (5000 M-1 cm(-1)/nm(3)) with 400 dye molecules packed into 16-nm particles, corresponding to a particle absorption coefficient of 4x10(7) M-1 cm(-1). UV excitation of the cyanostar component leads to higher brightness (>6000 M-1 cm(-1)/ nm(3)) by energy transfer to rhodamine emitters. Coated NPs stain cells and are thus promising for bioimaging.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAngewandte Chemie International Edition
Volume60
Issue number17
Pages (from-to)9450-9458
Number of pages9
ISSN1433-7851
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Apr 2021

    Research areas

  • cell imaging, cyanostar macrocycles, fluorescent dyes, fluorescent nanoparticles, SMILES

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