Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation

This paper reports the optical characteristics and growth mechanism of some amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles (ACNPs) prepared in ethanol via the nanosecond-pulse laser ablation in liquid (N-PLAL) method with optimum laser parameters. As-prepared samples were characterized using different analytical...

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Main Authors: Salim, A. A., Ghoshal, S. K., Bakhtiar, H.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier B.V. 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/94903/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.photonics.2020.100889
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spelling my.utm.949032022-04-29T22:22:11Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/94903/ Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation Salim, A. A. Ghoshal, S. K. Bakhtiar, H. QC Physics This paper reports the optical characteristics and growth mechanism of some amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles (ACNPs) prepared in ethanol via the nanosecond-pulse laser ablation in liquid (N-PLAL) method with optimum laser parameters. As-prepared samples were characterized using different analytical tools. The effects of different accumulative pulse irradiation times (0–2100 s) on the fluorescence quantum yield, bonding vibration, absorption, and photoluminescence emission traits of these samples were determined. The transmission electron microscope image and select area electron diffraction pattern of the samples displayed the nucleation of nearly spherical ACNPs (mean size ~23.07 ± 4.31 nm) with self-agglomerated morphology. The emergence of a broad halo around 15-30° in the X-ray diffraction pattern verified the amorphous structure of the ACNPs. Fourier-transform infrared and optical absorption spectra of the ACNPs showed the existence of protein components and many intense plus weak peaks in the range of 315 to 278 nm, respectively. Photoluminescence spectra of the ACNPs exhibited three prominent peaks at 406, 435, and 459 nm. Fluorescence quantum yield of the ACNPs prepared at the laser fluence of 2.1 ± 0.4 J/cm2 was discerned to be 0.0242. These amorphous ACNPs are asserted to be beneficial for the biomedicine applications especially against the deadly viruses. Elsevier B.V. 2021 Article PeerReviewed Salim, A. A. and Ghoshal, S. K. and Bakhtiar, H. (2021) Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation. Photonics and Nanostructures - Fundamentals and Applications, 43 . p. 100889. ISSN 1569-4410 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.photonics.2020.100889
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic QC Physics
spellingShingle QC Physics
Salim, A. A.
Ghoshal, S. K.
Bakhtiar, H.
Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
description This paper reports the optical characteristics and growth mechanism of some amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles (ACNPs) prepared in ethanol via the nanosecond-pulse laser ablation in liquid (N-PLAL) method with optimum laser parameters. As-prepared samples were characterized using different analytical tools. The effects of different accumulative pulse irradiation times (0–2100 s) on the fluorescence quantum yield, bonding vibration, absorption, and photoluminescence emission traits of these samples were determined. The transmission electron microscope image and select area electron diffraction pattern of the samples displayed the nucleation of nearly spherical ACNPs (mean size ~23.07 ± 4.31 nm) with self-agglomerated morphology. The emergence of a broad halo around 15-30° in the X-ray diffraction pattern verified the amorphous structure of the ACNPs. Fourier-transform infrared and optical absorption spectra of the ACNPs showed the existence of protein components and many intense plus weak peaks in the range of 315 to 278 nm, respectively. Photoluminescence spectra of the ACNPs exhibited three prominent peaks at 406, 435, and 459 nm. Fluorescence quantum yield of the ACNPs prepared at the laser fluence of 2.1 ± 0.4 J/cm2 was discerned to be 0.0242. These amorphous ACNPs are asserted to be beneficial for the biomedicine applications especially against the deadly viruses.
format Article
author Salim, A. A.
Ghoshal, S. K.
Bakhtiar, H.
author_facet Salim, A. A.
Ghoshal, S. K.
Bakhtiar, H.
author_sort Salim, A. A.
title Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
title_short Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
title_full Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
title_fullStr Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
title_full_unstemmed Growth mechanism and optical characteristics of Nd:YAG laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: Influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
title_sort growth mechanism and optical characteristics of nd:yag laser ablated amorphous cinnamon nanoparticles produced in ethanol: influence of accumulative pulse irradiation time variation
publisher Elsevier B.V.
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/94903/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.photonics.2020.100889
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