Abstract

Exhibiting strong optical absorption in the visible – near-infrared, plasmonic nanomaterials can be used as transducers in optical biosensing, contrast agents in bioimaging and synthesizers of photothermal therapy. Such functionalities promise their employment as functional elements in tissue engineering platforms, but such applications typically require ultraclean nanomaterials to minimize toxicity problems, which is not easy using conventional chemical synthesis routes. We recently demonstrated the possibility of fabricating ultraclean bare (ligand-free) plasmonic Au and TiN nanoparticles by ultrashort laser ablation in liquid ambient. Exempt of any toxic contaminants and exhibiting a series of imaging and therapeutic functionalities, these nanomaterials present promising objects for various biomedical applications. Here, we review our recent progress in the co-electrospinning of laser-synthesized Au and TiN nanoparticles with polymers to form functionalized matrices for tissue engineering.

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