Quantitative Comparison of the Light-to-Heat Conversion Efficiency in Nanomaterials Suitable for Photothermal Therapy

Agnieszka Paściak(Polish Academy of Sciences), Riccardo Marin(Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), Lise Abiven(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Aleksandra Pilch-Wróbel(Polish Academy of Sciences), Małgorzata Misiak(Polish Academy of Sciences), Wujun Xu(University of Eastern Finland), Katarzyna Prorok(Polish Academy of Sciences), Oleksii Bezkrovnyi(Polish Academy of Sciences), Ł. Marciniak(Polish Academy of Sciences), Corinne Chanéac(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Florence Gazeau(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Rana Bazzi(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Stéphane Roux(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Bruno Viana(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Vesa‐Pekka Lehto(University of Eastern Finland), Daniel Jaque(Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), Artur Bednarkiewicz(Polish Academy of Sciences)
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
July 18, 2022
Cited by 105Open Access
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Abstract

Functional colloidal nanoparticles capable of converting between various energy types are finding an increasing number of applications. One of the relevant examples concerns light-to-heat-converting colloidal nanoparticles that may be useful for localized photothermal therapy of cancers. Unfortunately, quantitative comparison and ranking of nanoheaters are not straightforward as materials of different compositions and structures have different photophysical and chemical properties and may interact differently with the biological environment. In terms of photophysical properties, the most relevant information to rank these nanoheaters is the light-to-heat conversion efficiency, which, along with information on the absorption capacity of the material, can be used to directly compare materials. In this work, we evaluate the light-to-heat conversion properties of 17 different nanoheaters belonging to different groups (plasmonic, semiconductor, lanthanide-doped nanocrystals, carbon nanocrystals, and metal oxides). We conclude that the light-to-heat conversion efficiency alone is not meaningful enough as many materials have similar conversion efficiencies─in the range of 80-99%─while they significantly differ in their extinction coefficient. We therefore constructed their qualitative ranking based on the external conversion efficiency, which takes into account the conventionally defined light-to-heat conversion efficiency and its absorption capacity. This ranking demonstrated the differences between the samples more meaningfully. Among the studied systems, the top-ranking materials were black porous silicon and CuS nanocrystals. These results allow us to select the most favorable materials for photo-based theranostics and set a new standard in the characterization of nanoheaters.


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