iScience
Volume 24, Issue 3, 19 March 2021, 102189
Journal home page for iScience

Review
NIR-quantum dots in biomedical imaging and their future

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.102189Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Summary

Fluorescence imaging has gathered interest over the recent years for its real-time response and high sensitivity. Developing probes for this modality has proven to be a challenge. Quantum dots (QDs) are colloidal nanoparticles that possess unique optical and electronic properties due to quantum confinement effects, whose excellent optical properties make them ideal for fluorescence imaging of biological systems. By selectively controlling the synthetic methodologies it is possible to obtain QDs that emit in the first (650–950 nm) and second (1000–1400 nm) near infra-red (NIR) windows, allowing for superior imaging properties. Despite the excellent optical properties and biocompatibility shown by some NIR QDs, there are still some challenges to overcome to enable there use in clinical applications. In this review, we discuss the latest advances in the application of NIR QDs in preclinical settings, together with the synthetic approaches and material developments that make NIR QDs promising for future biomedical applications.

Subject areas

Optical Materials
Biomedical Engineering
Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Chemistry

Cited by (0)