WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7150

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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Article
    Iron Oxide Nanocube Assembly on Silver Nanowire Templates to Enhance Magnetic Hyperthermia Performance
    (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2026) Balcı, Sinan; Tiryaki, Ecem; Sadeghi, Ehsan; Mannir, Abubakar R.; Balci, Sinan; Pellegrino, Teresa; 04.04. Department of Photonics; 04. Faculty of Science; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology
    Iron oxide nanocubes (IONCs) represent one of the benchmark magnetic nanoparticles able to most efficiently convert magnetic energy into heat for magnetic hyperthermia cancer treatment, and their heat losses can be further increased by controlling their assembly through the synthesis of ordered structures. However, achieving the alignment of nanoparticles with one-dimensional chain or columnar structures into long arrays to then study their magnetic heat losses still remains a significant challenge. This study exploits silver nanowires as high-surface-area anisotropic templates for the controlled chaining of IONCs. The surfaces of the IONCs were purposely functionalized with polyethyleneimine (IONCs@PEI) and interacted with silver nanowire (AgNW) surfaces via electrostatic attraction. Here, alternating current (AC) magnetometry was employed to compare the heating performance expressed as specific absorption rate values between individually coated IONCs@PEI and AgNWs@IONCs@PEI composites at various magnetic field strengths and frequencies. SAR values reveal that clustering of IONCs on AgNW surfaces improves the heating efficiency at an applied magnetic field strength of 24 kA m-1, regardless of the applied frequencies, with SAR values of AgNWs@IONCs@PEI composites outperforming those of individual IONCs@PEI. Moreover, dynamic hysteresis loops showed that the coercive field of AgNWs@IONCs@PEI increased significantly at 24 kA m-1, indicating the existence of strong magnetic dipolar interactions between nanoparticles. This study shows an innovative approach for guiding the orientation of magnetic nanoparticles using one-dimensional templates to enhance their heating performance.
  • Article
    Selective Growth of Fapbbr3 Nanocrystals With Precisely Tailored Optical Properties for Advanced Optoelectronic Applications
    (Amer Chemical Soc, 2025) Guvenc, C. Meric; Balcı, Sinan; Polat, Nahit; Polat, Nahit; Arica, Tugce A.; Balci, Sinan; 04.04. Department of Photonics; 04. Faculty of Science; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology
    Understanding the evolution of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) during their colloidal synthesis is essential for achieving improved control over their physical and chemical properties. The fast reaction kinetics and concurrent nucleation and growth periods of lead halide perovskite NCs pose significant challenges in controlling the synthesis. Here, we present the room-temperature colloidal synthesis of FAPbBr3 NCs with physically decoupled nucleation and growth periods by using the common oleylamine and oleic acid ligand pair for lead halide perovskite NCs. Importantly, in this method, the nucleation and growth phases are entirely decoupled by halting the reaction at a metastable state, where the FAPbBr3 nuclei are formed. Subsequently, preformed FAPbBr3 nuclei are selectively grown by increasing supersaturation. This is achieved by reducing the monomer solubility through the injection of oleic acid into the solution. Notably, two-dimensional perovskite nanostructures form as intermediate products during the synthesis. Furthermore, the size of the FAPbBr3 NCs is tuned from 5.7 to 13.5 nm by controlling the injected oleic acid amount. Photoluminescence quantum yields of the FAPbBr3 perovskite NCs synthesized by using this method reached up to 95%. These findings demonstrate a robust strategy for the controlled synthesis of FAPbBr3 perovskite NCs, providing precisely tailored optical properties for advanced applications such as solar cells, photodetectors, and light-emitting diodes.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 5
    Citation - Scopus: 5
    Light-Induced, Liquid Crystal-Templated Fabrication of Large-Area Pure Nanoporous Gold Films With High-Density Plasmonic Cavities
    (Amer Chemical Soc, 2024) Polat, Nahit; Balcı, Fadime Mert; Balcı, Sinan; Balci, Fadime Mert; Balci, Sinan; 04.04. Department of Photonics; 04.01. Department of Chemistry; 04. Faculty of Science; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology
    Nanoporous gold (NPG) films are three-dimensional gold (Au) frameworks characterized by a uniform distribution of nanoscale irregular pores. Typically produced via a dealloying process, where the less noble silver (Ag) is selectively etched out, NPG films offer a large surface area, excellent chemical stability, remarkable catalytic activity, unique optical properties, and biocompatibility. These attributes make them invaluable for applications in catalysis, plasmonics, biosensors, and nanophotonics. However, the presence of residual Ag from the dealloying process can limit their performance in certain applications. In this study, we report a novel method for the fabrication of ultrapure, large-area NPG films (several cm2) using a light-induced and liquid crystal-templated method. A hexagonal lyotropic liquid crystal containing a strong acid and a nonionic surfactant is combined with an aqueous solution of HAuCl4, followed by the photochemical synthesis of gold nanoparticles (NPs) within the liquid crystal. After calcination of the Au NP-containing liquid crystal film at high temperature, pure NPG films are produced. We demonstrate surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) of Rhodamine 6G (R6G) molecules adsorbed on the NPG films and detect extremely low concentrations (below 10-6 M) of R6G. Additionally, we thoroughly investigated the formation and optical properties of the NPG films. The results reveal that the ultrapure NPG films contain high-density plasmonic nanocavities, where substantial electromagnetic fields are generated, leading to significant enhancement of optical processes at nanoscale dimensions.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Hyperspectral Imaging of Exciton Polaritons in Optical Microcavities
    (Amer Chemical Soc, 2024) Polat, Nahit; Balcı, Sinan; O''zdemir, Sahin K.; Balci, Sinan; 04.04. Department of Photonics; 04. Faculty of Science; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology
    Photons can be confined in optical microcavities both spectrally and spatially, which allows us to study the light-matter interaction in both weak and strong coupling regimes. While the former is identified by the Purcell factor, which quantifies the suppression or enhancement of the spontaneous emission rate of the quantum emitters coupled to the cavity modes, the latter is identified by the formation of hybrid photon-matter modes called exciton polaritons and thus represents an avoided crossing in the spectra. Until now, various imaging and spectroscopic techniques have been extensively used to study exciton polariton formation in optical microcavities, and the coupling between excitons and photons has been statically and dynamically tuned. Herein, we demonstrate the hyperspectral imaging of exciton polaritons in optical microcavities. Two thin metal films acting as reflectors and a polymer matrix containing a collection of quantum emitters form a hybrid system for polariton imaging. We show a strong exciton-photon interaction between photons confined in the microcavity and Frenkel excitons of dye molecules placed inside the optical microcavity. We find that exciton polaritons can be imaged and spatially mapped in the optical microcavity by using hyperspectral imaging in the visible region. We envision that our findings will help us to understand exciton polariton formation in the spectral and spatial domains at the same time across different coupling regimes.