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Acquiring the temperature of a single living cell is not a trivial task. In this paper, we devise a novel nanothermometer, capable of accurately determining the temperature of solutions as well as biological systems such as HeLa cancer cells. The nanothermometer is based on the temperature-sensitive fluorescence of NaYF(4):Er(3+),Yb(3+) nanoparticles, where the intensity ratio of the green fluorescence bands of the Er(3+) dopant ions ((2)H(11/2) --> (4)I(15/2) and (4)S(3/2) --> (4)I(15/2)) changes with temperature. The nanothermometers were first used to obtain thermal profiles created when heating a colloidal solution of NaYF(4):Er(3+),Yb(3+) nanoparticles in water using a pump-probe experiment. Following incubation of the nanoparticles with HeLa cervical cancer cells and their subsequent uptake, the fluorescent nanothermometers measured the internal temperature of the living cell from 25 degrees C to its thermally induced death at 45 degrees C.
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Fiorenzo Vetrone
Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique
Rafik Naccache
Concordia University
Alicia Zamarrón
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
ACS Nano
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Concordia University
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Vetrone et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dbe1b89e6f14d6f1684acc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/nn100244a
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