Cargando…

Core–Shell Structured Fluorescent Protein Nanoparticles: New Paradigm Toward Zero‐Thermal‐Quenching in High‐Power Biohybrid Light‐Emitting Diodes

Stable and efficient high‐power biohybrid light‐emitting diodes (Bio‐HLEDs) using fluorescent proteins (FPs) in photon downconverting filters have not been achieved yet, reaching best efficiencies of 130 lm W(−1) stable for >5 h. This is related to the rise of the device temperature (70–80 °C) ca...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nieddu, Mattia, Patrian, Marta, Ferrara, Sara, Fuenzalida Werner, Juan Pablo, Kohler, Fabian, Anaya‐Plaza, Eduardo, Kostiainen, Mauri A., Dietz, Hendrik, Berenguer, Jesús Rubén, Costa, Rubén D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10238177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37013464
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202300069
Descripción
Sumario:Stable and efficient high‐power biohybrid light‐emitting diodes (Bio‐HLEDs) using fluorescent proteins (FPs) in photon downconverting filters have not been achieved yet, reaching best efficiencies of 130 lm W(−1) stable for >5 h. This is related to the rise of the device temperature (70–80 °C) caused by FP‐motion and quick heat‐transmission in water‐based filters, they lead to a strong thermal emission quenching followed by the quick chromophore deactivation via photoinduced H‐transfer. To tackle both issues at once, this work shows an elegant concept of a new FP‐based nanoparticle, in which the FP core is shielded by a SiO(2)‐shell (FP@SiO(2)) with no loss of the photoluminescence figures‐of‐merit over years in foreign environments: dry powder at 25 °C (ambient) or constant 50 °C, as well as suspensions in organic solvents. This enables the preparation of water‐free photon downconverting coatings with FP@SiO(2), realizing on‐chip high‐power Bio‐HLEDs with 100 lm W(−1) stable for >120 h. Both thermal emission quenching and H‐transfer deactivation are suppressed, since the device temperature holds <40 °C and remote high‐power Bio‐HLEDs exhibit final stabilities of 130 days compared to reference devices with water‐based FP@SiO(2) (83 days) and FP‐polymer coatings (>100 h). Hence, FP@SiO(2) is a new paradigm toward water‐free zero‐thermal‐quenching biophosphors for first‐class high‐power Bio‐HLEDs.