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Svetlana Neretina

Researcher at University of Notre Dame

Publications -  77
Citations -  3651

Svetlana Neretina is an academic researcher from University of Notre Dame. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmon & Substrate (electronics). The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 67 publications receiving 3041 citations. Previous affiliations of Svetlana Neretina include Temple University & Georgia Institute of Technology.

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Gold Nanorods: From Synthesis and Properties to Biological and Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: Of all the possible nanoparticle shapes, gold nanorods are especially intriguing as they offer strong plasmonic fields while exhibiting excellent tunability and biocompatibility, according to a review of their radiative and nonradiative properties.
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Catalytic Reduction of 4-Nitrophenol: A Quantitative Assessment of the Role of Dissolved Oxygen in Determining the Induction Time

TL;DR: The simultaneous monitoring of the spectroscopic signal and the dissolved oxygen content within the aqueous solution reveals that the induction period is the time interval required for the level of dissolved oxygen to fall below a critical value that is dependent upon whether Au, Ag, or Pd nanoparticles are used as the catalyst.
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Gold Nanorods: From Synthesis and Properties to Biological and Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: A review of gold nanoparticles can be found in this paper, where the authors describe spontaneous self-assembly, chemically driven assembly, and polymer-based alignment of gold nanorods.
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When lithography meets self-assembly: a review of recent advances in the directed assembly of complex metal nanostructures on planar and textured surfaces.

TL;DR: The progress made in the directed assembly of periodic arrays of these complex metal nanostructures on planar and textured substrates is described.
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Seeing is believing: hot electron based gold nanoplasmonic optical hydrogen sensor.

TL;DR: Finite time difference domain (FDTD) calculations show that the excitation of the Au NHs plasmon modes generates stronger electric fields at the interface in comparison to a spherical geometry of similar dimensions.