What is it about?
Quantum confinement in inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals produces brightly luminescent nanoparticles endowed with unique photo-physical properties, such as tunable optical properties. These have found widespread applications in nanotechnology. The ability to render such nanostructures biocompatible, while maintaining their tunable radiation in the visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum, renders them appropriate for bio-applications.
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Why is it important?
Promising in vitro and in vivo diagnostic applications have been demonstrated, such as fluorescence-based detection of biological interactions, single molecule tracking, multiplexing and immunoassaying. In particular, these fluorescent inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals, generally known as quantum dots, have the potential of remarkable immunobiological applications.
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This page is a summary of: Recent advances in biocompatible semiconductor nanocrystals for immunobiological applications, Colloids and Surfaces B Biointerfaces, November 2017, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2017.08.026.
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