2.1. AuNPs
The starting material for all inks preparations was citrate-coated spherical AuNPs prepared by the Turkevich method [
17], i.e., by reduction of HAuCl
4 with excess sodium citrate in bidistilled water (for details see Materials and Methods). Several 500 mL samples of such AuNP solutions were prepared in the course of the study. In all cases the expected sharp LSPR absorption band typical of small Au nanospheres was observed, with λ
max = 519 nm, see
Figure 2A, imparting the typical intense purple-red color to the colloidal solutions (
Figure 2B).
These aqueous colloidal solutions of citrate-coated AuNP are stable with time (no spectral changes in a 60 days range). Transmission electron microscope (TEM) imaging confirms the expected spheroidal shape of the prepared AuNP,
Figure 2C, with average d = 17(±1) nm for all preparations. ζ-potential was −34(±2) mV (average of six preparations), due to the citrate coating. The Au(III) to Au(0) conversion yield can be safely considered ~100%, thanks to the noble nature of gold and to the large excess of the reductant (citrate anion). It has to be noted that following the Turkevich protocol, the total Au concentration in these colloidal solutions is 2.5 × 10
−4 M (0.049 mg Au/mL). However, this value is too low for such solutions to be used as an ink component. As an example, we used colloidal solutions with 0.5–0.3 mg Au/mL (corresponding to 16.7–10 nM nanoparticles) for preparing photothermal inks with GNS [
11]. Moreover, addition of alcohols is required to tune the viscosity to values suitable for inkjet printers. In this work we adopted a solvent mixture that we have already found to be optimal [
9,
11], i.e., 70% v/v aqueous AuNP solution, 20% v/v ethylene glycol and 10% v/v 2-propanol, with a viscosity and surface tension 1.92 cP and 40 mN/m, respectively, that is suitable for inkjet printers. Mixing the aqueous colloidal solution to the alcoholic components may induce agglomeration of citrate-coated AuNP. In addition, to prepare inks we needed 10-fold concentrated AuNP solutions (10 × solutions hereinafter), that can be obtained by ultracentrifugation, supernatant removal and pellet redissolution in 1/10 of the initial volume (see Materials and Methods for details). To make AuNP stable during all these procedures we coated them with PEG thiols, obtaining AuNP@HS-PEG.
2.2. AuNPs Coated with Neutral HS-PEG of Different Lengths
We used a series of thiolated PEG of general formula HS-(CH
2CH
2O)
n-CH
3, with molecular weights mw = 2000, 5000, 10000 and 20000 (n ~ 44, 112, 226 and 453, respectively). For sake of simplicity, we refer here to such polymers as HS-PEG
mw. In addition, also the α,ω bifunctional polymer HS-(CH
2CH
2O)
n-CH
2COOH was used, with average mw 3000 (n ~ 66), referred to as HS-PEGCOOH in this paper. The –COOH group has typically a pKa of 4–5. Accordingly, in neutral water (pH 7) HS-PEGCOOH is deprotonated, bears a terminal negative charge, and can be referred to as HS-PEGCOO(−). Due to this, the properties of AuNP coated with HS-PEGCOOH are described in the Results and Discussion
Section 2.4, that is dedicated to charged coatings, despite of the fact that HS-PEGCOOH has properties similar to those of all the neutral HS-PEG coatings.
The coating step is carried out by adding the chosen HS-PEG in 2 × 10
−5 M concentration to a volume of freshly prepared AuNP solution. HS-PEG concentration was chosen with this rationale: a spherical AuNP of 17 nm diameter has a mass of 4.97 × 10
−17g; the Au(0) concentration in the citrate-coated AuNP solutions is 0.049 mg Au/mL; this leads to a 1.64 × 10
−9 molar concentration of AuNP; an AuNP of 17 nm has ~ 6 × 10
3 surface atoms [
18], this meaning a concentration of potentially available surface Au atoms in the AuNP solution of ~ 9.8 × 10
−6 M. Following also the obvious consideration that, due to steric crowding, not all the Au surface atoms can be coordinated by a thiolate group [
19], we considered 2 × 10
−5 M as a sufficiently large excess for HS-PEG to saturate the AuNP surface in the coating process. With all the used HS-PEG we observed a ~ 5 nm red-shift of the LSPR band maximum (λ
max = 524 nm) on grafting, due to the small local refractive index change when displacing citrate with
−S-PEG on the NP surface. As representative of all pegylations, the spectrum of AuNP@HS-PEG
5000 (10 ×) is compared in
Figure 3A (red line) with that of the starting AuNP solution (black line; identical spectra were obtained for all other HS-PEG). It has to be pointed out that the two spectra are recorded in 1 mm and 1 cm cells, respectively, and thus, in principle, their absorbances should be identical. However, pegylation and preparation of 10 × solutions requires repeated ultracentrifugation/redissolution cycles, that slightly decrease the AuNP quantity at each cycle, explaining the difference in
Figure 3A. The spectrum of the ink obtained from the 10 × solution is also displayed in
Figure 3A (blue line). Ink samples were obtained by adding 100 μL 2-propanol and 200 μL ethylene glycol to 700 μL of a 10 × pegylated AuNP aqueous solution.
Accordingly, in the just prepared ink the absorbance decrease is due to dilution with alcohols. However, no change in the spectrum shape is observed, indicating stability in the new solvent mixture at least on a short time stint (the spectrum was recorded 1 h after mixing). Also λ
max does not shift significantly, as expected from the small refractive index (n
D) differences between water and the additives, (water n
D 1.33, 2-propanol n
D 1.37, ethylene glycol n
D 1.43), from the preponderance of water in the ink and from the small sensitivity to refractive index changes of the LSPR band of gold nanospheres (44 nm/RIU; RIU = refractive index units) [
20]. On the other hand, inks show instability on ageing (weeks range), with the ink color changing from red to violet-blue (see SM1). This can be monitored spectroscopically.
Figure 3B shows the representative case of AuNP coated with HS-PEG
2000. While after 3 and 7 days the spectrum was still superimposable on the initial one, after 14 days a shoulder appeared at λ > 650 nm, as a typical indication of AuNP agglomeration [
21]. Interestingly, inks prepared with AuNP coated with HS-PEG of increasing molecular weight showed that AuNP with longer PEG coatings undergo more significant AuNP agglomeration, when compared at the same ageing time (
Figure 3C, 7 days). This counter-intuitive observation can be rationalized by observing the number of grafted HS-PEG per AuNP,
Table 1 (data obtained from thermogravimetric analysis, SM2).
Such a number decreases on increasing the PEG length, most probably due both to hindering of the –SH function of the incoming polymers and to hindering of the available surface on the AuNP by the already grafted chains, two effects that become more significant with increasing the polymer dimensions. The slow agglomeration observed when AuNP coated with high mw PEG are dissolved in the alcohols/water ink mixture corresponds to the situation in which NP with low (i.e., partial) polymer coverage are dissolved in a poor solvent. In this case, we expect to find a minimum with negative free energy for approaching NP that interdigitate their polymer chains at NP-NP distances < 2L (L being the thickness of the coating polymer layer) [
22].
Table 1 reports also the hydrodynamic radius and the ζ-potential values of the AuNP with different coatings. Citrate-coated AuNP have a highly negative ζ value (−34 mV) due to the citrate layer. Citrate is displaced when HS-PEGs are added. The latter adhere on the Au surface in the thiolate
–S-PEG form and this explains the observed negative ζ values, that however decrease with the increasing coating thickness (the ζ-potential is measured at the slipping plane), erasing any electrostatic contribution to AuNP stability.
Using freshly prepared inks (ageing < 1 day), we printed patterns of ~ 1.0 cm
2 on glass surfaces using the dropcasting protocol described in the Material and Methods
Section 3.3.7. Such protocol allowed us to avoid the use of expensive research instruments for inkjet printing (not owned by our laboratories), while also allowing to prepare printed patterns mimicking the actually inkjet-printed ones. We used surface densities similar to those obtained with the optimal parameters standardized on a Dimatix Materials Printer DMP-2800 research inkjet printer (FUJIFILM Dimatix, Inc., Santa Clara (CA), USA) in previous collaborations [
9,
11]. Such parameters were 10 pL drops with 1681 drops mm
−2 density and 1–11 printed layers with a 0.42 mg Au/mL ink concentration, corresponding to the 0.71–7.81 μg Au/cm
2 range. In the present paper the inks concentration varied among 0.21 and 0.11 mg Au/mL, depending on the preparation. Using a 40 μL volume of inks, these spread over a ~1 cm
2 surface (see Materials and Methods
Section 3.3.7). This allowed us to print surfaces with a Au density between 8.4 μg/cm
2 and 4.4 μg/cm
2. We found a similar behaviour for all prints, almost independently on the mw of the HS-PEG coating (see SM3).
Figure 4 shows the representative case of AuNP@HS-PEG
5000. Printed surfaces were first examined after standard drying (14 h at 40 °C). A λ
max red-shift of 20 nm was observed in the absorption spectrum with respect to the liquid ink, blue line in
Figure 4A. This is attributable to local refractive index changes, as after drying AuNP are no more dispersed in a water/alcohols mixture but surrounded by the PEG chains, that have an higher refractive index than water (eg n
D = 1.45 for PEG
200 [
23]. AuNP surface wetting by residual ethylene glycol (n
D = 1.43) from the ink formulation should be also taken into account, due to its higher boiling point (197.6 °C) with respect to water and 2-propanol (82.5 °C). A corresponding slight color change is perceivable also to the eye, when a just-dropcasted surface (a 40 μL drop of liquid ink on glass,
Figure 4B) is compared with a 14 h-dried out surface,
Figure 4C.
Following the evolution of the printed pattern with time by absorption spectroscopy (
Figure 4E) revealed a progressive enlargement of the LSPR band with the formation and increase of a second maximum at longer wavelengths (λ
max = 700 nm after 7 days, dark violet spectrum). This is due to the agglomeration of AuNP, that leads to sufficiently short interparticle distances that LSPR hybridization takes place [
13]. In agreement with spectral data, the color of 7 days aged printed patterns turns to blue-violet,
Figure 4D. Printed patterns aged 7 days were redissolved in water by prolonged ultrasound treatment. Identically to the parent AuNP@HS-PEG
5000 aqueous solutions (spectrum added for comparison in
Figure 4F, black line), the obtained deep red solution displays an absorption spectrum with λ
max at 524 nm,
Figure 4F, red line. However, the LSPR absorption is still significant at λ > 600 nm, suggesting a not complete separation into individual AuNP and the persistence of small agglomerates. This is consistent with TEM images obtained from solutions of redissolved AuNP@HS-PEG
5000 printed patterns,
Figure 4G, showing separate and agglomerated AuNP, still maintaining the original dimensions and shape, together with AuNP that have apparently started an authentic aggregation (i.e., fusion) process (see also SM4 for a larger image).
While the general behaviour of printed patterns is similar among all inks made with AuNP coated with neutral HS-PEGs, aggregation and consequent spectral changes parallel what observed for liquid inks, i.e., it is more significant for AuNP coated with the highest molecular weight polymers (see SM3). This clearly states that it is useless to increase the PEG dimensions in the coating to avoid that, in printed patterns, the dry AuNP could come sufficiently close one to the other to give plasmon hybridization. There is an apparent contraddiction with the hydrodynamic radius trend observed in
Table 1 for aqueous colloidal solutions, as r
hyd increases with PEG mw. However, PEG chains have a good affinity for water, where they tend to outspread, while in the dry printed patterns we can hypothesize that their chains collapse on the AuNP surface, allowing close approach between AuNP.
2.3. Pegylated AuNP Codissolved with EthylCellulose (EC)
In the attempt of obtaining inks that fit the requirements of an inkjet printer while also assuring AuNP separation in the printed patterns, i.e., avoiding LSPR hybridization, we added EC, a non- volatile polymer, to the AuNP liquid inks. The aim was to keep AuNP dispersed in the dry prints, i.e., statistically separated and mechanically immobilized within the dispersant matrix. EC was chosen as it is used as standard dispersant and binder in the formulation of nanoparticle-based inks for inkjet printers [
16]. EC scarce solubility in water and aqueous mixtures forced us to use ethanol as the solvent. AuNP@HS-PEG
5000 were dissolved in ethanol, in which they were stable at least for 24 h, showing a sharp LSPR absorption slightly red shifted with respect to water (λ
max 528 nm) due to the refraction index change (see SM5). Addition of 0.1% w/v EC was carried out on 1.5 mL ethanolic AuNP solution, using commercial EC with η (viscosity) of 10, 22, 46 and 100 cp (for all the ECs (ethyl cellulose) samples the nominal viscosity η reported by the seller (Sigma Aldrich, Milano, Italy) in the specification sheets refers to 5% EC solutions in 80:20 toluen/ethanol). The nominal degree of methoxy substitution on the D-glucose units of cellulose is 48% for all the used products, so the differences in η are all attributable to differences in mw, that may be empirically calculated as 243000, 378000, 571000 and 882000 for EC with 10, 22, 46 and 100 cP viscosity, respectively (mw = k(η)
n, where k and n are empirical constants that depends on the method used to determine mw; mw mentioned in this paper are calculated using typical values reported for EC, k = 66.96 × 10
3, n = 0.56 [
24]). In all cases, no significant LSPR shift was observed on EC addition. Ink stability was checked by absorption spectroscopy, observing that after 4 days only the solution with 10 cP EC still showed an acceptable spectrum (comparable to that of the PEG-coated AuNP dissolved in pure ethanol), while solutions with ECs with higher η presented a shoulder at ~ 700 nm, already indicating aggregation (SM6). Nevertheless, glass surfaces were printed using freshly prepared inks with all the four EC additives. A large, shifted absorption band was always observed after the usual 14 h drying process,
Figure 5A. We hypothesise that this is due to aggregates of AuNP with different overall shape and dimensions. Further studies were carried out using the EC with lower viscosity (10cp), that was empirically choosen due to the closer similarity of the absorption spectrum of its printed patterns (
Figure 5A (i), λ
max = 580 nm) with the original AuNP LSPR band. Ethanolic inks containing EC 10cP in different w/v percentages (0.05–0.3%) were prepared and glass surfaces printed. Absorption spectra after an ageing time of 7 days are shown in
Figure 5B for 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3% solutions.
A few observations can be made here. First, the use of pure ethanol with added EC caused the spreading of the dropped ink on a larger area (actually all the area delimitated by a PDMS fence, see Materials and Methods) and resulted in a strong coffee stain effect, as it can be seen by the photographs of the printed slides (
Figure 5B, insets). Prints changed to a blue color, as expected from the large range of absorption that includes visible and NIR, and a more significant λ
max red shift was observed in the spectra for higher EC concentrations. These results discouraged the use of hydrophobic polymeric additives in inks, at least as long as AuNP are coated with hydrophilic polymers. Second, AuNP dramatically agglomerate in the liquid ink and in the dried out printed patterns, with the complete loss of the original sharp LSPR band shape. The longer was the EC polymer chain and the higher was the additive concentration, the more intense was this phenomenon. Although we have discarded and not further investigated these systems, we can hypothesize that the presence of the non-volatile hydrophobic polymer in the printed patterns promotes segregation of the hydrophilic AuNP during the drying process, with the formation of clusters of nanoparticles of different shapes and dimensions. This hypothesis is consistent with the increasing degree of LSPR red shift with increasing EC concentration. SEM images on printed patterns allow to visualize the EC matrix but also the AuNP, see
Figure 5C (0.2% EC printed sample). AuNP can be spotted both as isolated particles and as aligned or cropped groups (see in particular the enlarged section framed in red). The different type and degree of aggregation is consistent with the large, featureless absorption band, that is generated by the superimposition of different LSPR hybridizations.
2.4. Coating with Ionic Polymers
The next step of this study was to coat AuNP with ionic, charged polymers. A first HS-PEGCOOH (mw 3000) layer was grafted on the surface as already described for the neutral HS-PEG, in order to have both sterical stabilisation and a significantly negative ζ-potential for the AuNP. We measured ζ = −22 mV in neutral water. The negative charge is due to the carboxylic acid moieties, that are fully deprotonated at pH 7, as the typical pKa of a –COOH groups is in the 4–5 range (eg the pKa of acetic acid is 4.76). Accordingly, we describe AuNP coated with this polymer as AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−), see sketch in
Figure 6. The ζ value is consistent with those reported in
Table 1 for neutral HS-PEG coatings with mw 2000 and 5000 (−13 and −6 mV, respectively) as in the latter cases the weakly negative values are due to the residual influence at the slipping plane of the remote negative thiolate groups grafted on the AuNP surface. From TGA analysis (SM2E-F) we calculated the number of polymers per AuNP as 1532, slightly lower than what found for the longer but neutral HS-PEG
5000. This is coherent with what we observed with HS-PEGCOOH and GNS [
25] and is attributable to the electrostatic repulsive effect between grafted and incoming polymers. Overcoating with PAH, a positively charged ionic polymer, was obtained by electrostatic adhesion of the polymer chains to the negatively charged AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−). PAH was added in 2 x 10
−5 M concentration to AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) solutions, as this quantity demonstrated sufficient to obtain the maximum PAH coating in the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) complexes (see
Figure 6 for a sketch). These have a ζ-potential of +36(2) mV after 2 h equilibration at room temperature and two cycles of ultracentrifugation-redissolution in bidistilled water to remove non adhering PAH (final pH in the 5–6 range). The use of larger concentrations of PAH did not lead to an higher ζ-potential, suggesting complete coating with the chosen concentration. Finally, these complexes were also further overcoated with the negatively charged polymer PSS using an identical synthetic procedure to obtain the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) complex (sketch in
Figure 6). This displayed a negative ζ-potential of −27(2) mV (final pH ~ 6). It has to be pointed out that in the slightly acidic pH range of these solutions and up to strongly basic pH values (eg 9 or higher), the ζ-potential values do not change, as all the polymers maintain their ionic state and their typical charge. First, as we have already discussed, a –COOH function is prevalently deprotonated at pH > 5. Then, PAH is a polyamino polymer containing only –NH
2 functions, and protonated primary amines have typically pKa values > 10 (eg pKa = 10.60 for
n-butylammmonium [
26]. Finally, PSS has –SO
3− groups that are deprotonated up to pH 14 (eg, benzenesulfonic acid is a strong acid [
27]). The absorption spectra in water show a sharp LSPR maximum for all complexes, with negligible λ
max variations (< 5 nm) with any of the coatings. TGA and DLS measurements (
Table 2) gave consistent results, showing an increasing quantity of coating material both as an absolute value and in the ratio with respect to the Au content, and an increase of the hydrodynamic radius on stepping from AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) to AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and to AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−). Ink preparation was carried out using again the standard formulation of 70%(v/v) aqueous component (containing the coated AuNP), 20% v/v ethylene glycol and 10% v/v 2-propanol. Prior to mixing with alcohols, 10 × aqueous solutions of coated AuNP were analyzed by ICP-OES to determine Au concentration (data listed in
Table 2). Inks were prepared either with the pure colloidal solution (AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) case) or with the colloidal solutions diluted with a calculated volume of bidistilled water (AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) cases) so to have all inks with the same Au concentration of 0.11 mg/mL.
The lower Au concentration in the 10× aqueous solution of AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) is due to the repeated ultracentrifugation cycles required to remove the excess PAH and to the tendency of PAH-coated NP to adhere to the plastic walls of the test tubes, resulting in a less efficient redissolution [
25].
Table 2 also reports λ
max values of inks absorption spectra recorded 1 h after preparation. Small λ
max variations were observed with respect to water, but a sharp LSPR band of identical shape as in water (
Figure 6A) was obtained in all cases. However, for the ink containing AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−), similarly to what described for all the PEG-coated AuNP, ink ageing (7 days) resulted in the formation of a shoulder at longer wavelength,
Figure 6B. On the contrary, the spectra of inks with AuNP overcoated with PAH and PSS did not change in 7d (
Figure 6B), indicating ink stability. Printing was carried out with the usual procedure using freshly prepared inks, and the stability of the printed patterns was monitored again by absorption spectroscopy.
Figure 6C–E compares the spectra recorded 1 day and 14 days after printing for the three inks. While prints with the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink showed the growth of a band at longer wavelength (λ
max 720 nm), due to AuNP agglomeration, both inks with AuNP overcoated with ionic polymers displayed an excellent peak shape constancy. The insets of
Figure 6C–E display the visual aspect of prints after 14 days. Prints with the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink turned into a blue-violet color, while the original red-purple color was maintained for prints with the inks containing AuNP further coated with PAH and PSS. To further consolidate this observation,
Figure 6F–G display SEM images taken on printed glasses (14 days ageing). A sharp difference was observed between an AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) print,
Figure 6F, and an AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) print,
Figure 6G. In the former, AuNP are thoroughly aggregated, while in the latter they are all sharply separated. A SEM image for a 14 days aged print from a AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) ink, included in the
Supplementary Materials (SM7), showed analogous features as those obtained with the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) ink).
Noticeably, also in the case of the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) prints, redissolution in water reverted agglomeration, yielding well separated AuNP (TEM image in SM8) with an absorbance identical to that recorded before ink formation (SM8).
2.5. Photothermal Reading of Secure Information
Once we obtained inks that give prints with the desired spectral stability, we carried out a proof-of-concept study on writing secure photothermal information. We used both AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) inks, and compared the results with a print of the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink. The photothermal response was recorded with interrogation of printed patterns with 1 day and 14 days ageing. The photothermal studies were carried out by irradiating printed patterns with laser sources at three different wavelengths (λ
irr), 488, 514 and 720 nm. This is the set of sources that falls inside the absorption range of the prints and that is currently available in our laboratories. We followed a protocol that we have already successfully adopted [
10,
11]. Briefly, using a E40 thermocamera (FLIR System, Inc., Santa Barbara, CA, USA)) we read a 320 × 240 pixels thermal image, inside which we define a ROI (region of interest) that includes the laser-irradiated area. We run data analysis determining the maximum temperature inside the ROI (± 0.1 °C accuracy). At a λ
irr at which the prints display a significant LSPR absorption, a typical steep ascending T vs time profile is observed on irradiation, turning into a plateau in less than 10 s (thermograms sketched in
Figure 1 give qualitatively similar examples; SM9 reports actual thermograms for this study). From such data we obtain ΔT
λ = T
max − T
0, with T
max = temperature of the plateau at a given λ of irradiation and T
0 = temperature before irradiation. The ΔT
λ data for prints with the three inks are displayed in
Figure 7, superimposed to the absorption spectra of the prints.
The expected ΔT
λ vs λ
irr trend was observed, approximately following the absorbance spectra profile. Noticeably, comparison of spectra at 1 day and 14 days after printing (solid and dashed lines, respectively) evidenced a perfect stability of the prints with inks of AuNP overcoated with PAH and PAH/PSS, while a very significant further spectral change took place for AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink prints. Among the three inks prints, the most significant differences were observed when irradiating at 720 nm. The absorbance at 720 nm was high for prints with AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) inks after 1 day, due to aggregation and plasmon hybridization, and evolved to an even higher absorbance after 14 days. As a consequence ΔT
720 = 8.4 °C (1d) and 11.4 °C (14 days),
Figure 7A. On the other hand, in the prints obtained with inks of AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) the coatings prevented aggregation and plasmon hybridation, keeping the original shape of the band unchanged after both 1 day and 14 days. Accordingly Abs
720 is negligible and ΔT
720 too (< 1 °C). As an example of application of the YES/NO reading scheme highlighted in the Introduction [
11], if ΔT = 5 °C was chosen as the threshold for a YES answer with λ
irr = 720 nm, the prints with AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) inks would give a NO answer, that is the correct one for an unaltered print. On the other hand, prints with the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink, would give a YES answer, that is wrong (altered print). Beside the application of this simple concept, a robust way to obtain a more complex information from photothermal data has been introduced in our previous papers [
11], that eliminates possible uncertainties due to laser power oscillations or ink concentration. A multiwavelength test with multiple levels can be set by defining a normalized temperature signature:
where ΔT
λ,max is the largest T increase among those obtained with the available set of laser sources (ΔT
514 in our case) and ΔT
λ is the T increase obtained when irradiating at any wavelength λ. A three level answer generating a three-color barcode can be established by choosing such levels as:
In this study we have only three available laser sources, so we can generate a barcode with three bars. However, these are enough to establish a clear difference between a correctly printed surface, like those with AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) inks, and a print with unsufficiently protected AuNP i.e., that with AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink.
Figure 7D–F show the S
λ values for the three prints and the corresponding three-wavelengths barcodes. Identical barcodes are obtained for the PAH- and PAH/PSS-overcoated AuNP inks (
Figure 7E,F), that do not change after 14 days. On the contrary, the print with the AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−) ink gives a different barcode at 1 day that, in addition, changes with time (14 days). It has to be noted that this result has been obtained by choosing a given surface concentration of gold, the three irradiation wavelengths and the three S
λ levels. Even considering a very simple printed pattern as in this work, all these parameters are the keys in which information can be hidden, i.e., their values are all needed both to write and to read the correct multiwavelength barcode. Of course, a stable ink that produces a print with a sharply peaked and time stable absorption is necessary. We have here shown that inks made of AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+) and AuNP@HS-PEGCOO(−)/PAH(+)/PSS(−) are suitable for this purpose. Finally, it has to be stressed that periodical check along a 2 months period of the inks and of the prints obtained with the PAH and PAH/PSS coated AuNP gave unmodified spectra.