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Quantum Dots: Applications for Artificial Atoms Expanding

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By Lynn Savage, Photonics Spectra Features Editor

Quantum dots, also known as semiconductor artificial atoms, have existed for several years now, and their use keeps on expanding. Primarily used as substitutes for dyes in fluorescence imaging, their propensity for being highly tunable emitters that resist photobleaching represents only a small fraction of their benefits. Commonly but not always comprising cores of cadmium selenide with a coating of zinc sulfide, quantum dots are perhaps best known for the tunability of their emission wavelength, once excited by an external light source: Change the size of the particle, get a specific...Read full article

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    Published: February 2011
    Glossary
    nano
    An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
    nanoparticle
    A small object that behaves as a whole unit or entity in terms of it's transport and it's properties, as opposed to an individual molecule which on it's own is not considered a nanoparticle.. Nanoparticles range between 100 and 2500 nanometers in diameter.
    quantum dots
    A quantum dot is a nanoscale semiconductor structure, typically composed of materials like cadmium selenide or indium arsenide, that exhibits unique quantum mechanical properties. These properties arise from the confinement of electrons within the dot, leading to discrete energy levels, or "quantization" of energy, similar to the behavior of individual atoms or molecules. Quantum dots have a size on the order of a few nanometers and can emit or absorb photons (light) with precise wavelengths,...
    Aaron R. ClappACSNanoBasic ScienceBiophotonicsbiosensorscancer therapyCdSechemotherapyCMOSCoherent Inc.cysteineDNAfluorescence imagingfluorescent dyesFRETgene therapyIgor MedintzIowa State UniversityLynn SavageMicroscopynanonanoparticlepentablock copolymersquantum dotsScripps Research InstituteSensors & Detectorsspectral imagingthe University of TorontotransfectiontumorsUlrich KrullUS Navy Research LaboratoryWeb ExclusivesZnS

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