Optical Properties of Metal/Semiconductor Nanoparticles and Assemblies Fabricated Through DNA Hybridisation
thesis
posted on 2025-07-29, 00:35authored byShon Kolomoisky
This research investigates the optical properties of metal and semiconductor nanocrystals, and their assemblies. We report novel and surprising polarisation anisotropy (in response to the polarisation of the excitation light) for the luminescence lifetimes of single semiconductor nanocrystals, and link this behaviour to complex excitonic trap state dynamics. As the optical properties of nanocrystals can be greatly enhanced through plasmon-exciton coupling, we optimise and utilise DNA hybridisation self-assembly to fabricate discrete nanostructures using gold nanorods, nanospheres, and semiconductor nanocrystals. We interrogate the photophysics of these assemblies at the single assembly level using correlative optical and electron microscopy and computational simulations.
History
Campus location
Australia
Principal supervisor
Alison Funston
Additional supervisor 1
Paul Mulvaney
Year of Award
2025
Department, School or Centre
Chemistry
Course
Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Type
DOCTORATE
Faculty
Faculty of Science
Rights Statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It must only be used for personal non-commercial research, education and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission. For further terms use the In Copyright link under the License field.