Abstract

Nanoparticles with monodisperse, spherical magnetic iron oxide cores and contiguous gold shells (Fe/Au NPs) have been synthesized in order to combine magnetophoretic responsiveness and localized surface plasmon resonance in a single nanoparticle. Such particles are sufficiently charged to be stable against flocculation in low ionic strength media, but they require surface modification to be stably dispersed in elevated ionic strength media that are appropriate for biotechnological applications. Dynamic light scattering and ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometry are used to monitor the colloidal stability of Fe/Au NPs in pH 7.4 phosphate buffered saline containing 154 mM NaCl (PBS). While uncoated particles flocculate immediately upon introduction to PBS, Fe/Au NPs with adsorbed layers of bovine serum albumin or the amphiphilic triblock copolymers Pluronic F127 and Pluronic F68 resist flocculation after more than 5 days in PBS. Adsorbed dextran allowed flocculation that was limited to the formation of small clusters, while poly(ethylene glycol) homopolymers ranging in molecular weight from 6000 to 100 000 were ineffective steric stabilizers. The effectiveness of adsorbed Pluronic copolymers as steric stabilizers was interpreted in terms of the measured adsorbed layer thickness and extended Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory predictions of interparticle interactions.

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