Issue 14, 2015

Characterizing nanoparticles in complex biological media and physiological fluids with depolarized dynamic light scattering

Abstract

Light scattering is one of the few techniques available to adequately characterize suspended nanoparticles (NPs) in real time and in situ. However, when it comes to NPs in multicomponent and optically complex aqueous matrices – such as biological media and physiological fluids – light scattering suffers from lack of selectivity, as distinguishing the relevant optical signals from the irrelevant ones is very challenging. We meet this challenge by building on depolarized scattering: Unwanted signals from the matrix are completely suppressed. This approach yields information with an unprecedented signal-to-noise ratio in favour of the NPs and NP-biomolecule corona complexes, which in turn opens the frontier to scattering-based studies addressing the behaviour of NPs in complex physiological/biological fluids.

Graphical abstract: Characterizing nanoparticles in complex biological media and physiological fluids with depolarized dynamic light scattering

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Nov 2014
Accepted
16 Jan 2015
First published
19 Jan 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 5991-5997

Author version available

Characterizing nanoparticles in complex biological media and physiological fluids with depolarized dynamic light scattering

S. Balog, L. Rodriguez-Lorenzo, C. A. Monnier, M. Obiols-Rabasa, B. Rothen-Rutishauser, P. Schurtenberger and A. Petri-Fink, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 5991 DOI: 10.1039/C4NR06538G

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