Avinash K. Murthy
University of Texas at Austin
14 Papers
220 Citations
Avinash K. Murthy is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanoclusters & Nanoparticle. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 14 publications.
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Papers
Controlled assembly of biodegradable plasmonic nanoclusters for near-infrared imaging and therapeutic applications.
Jasmine M. Tam,Justina O. Tam,Avinash K. Murthy,Davis R. Ingram,Li Leo Ma,Kort Travis,Keith P. Johnston,Konstantin V Sokolov +7 more
TL;DR: This synthesis of polymer/inorganic nanoclusters combines the imaging contrast and therapeutic capabilities afforded by the NIR-active nanoparticle assembly with the biodegradability of a polymer stabilizer.
Patent
Medical and Imaging Nanoclusters
Keith P. Johnston,Li Ma,Marc D. Feldman,Thormas E. Milner,Konstantin V Sokolov,Jastine Tam,Justina O. Tam,Stanislav Emelianov,Kort Travis,Avinash K. Murthy +9 more
- 26 Oct 2009
TL;DR: In this article, a nanocluster or a nanorose composition comprising two or more closely spaced nanoparticles each comprising one or more metals, metal oxides, inorganic substances, or a combination thereof and stabilizers is described.
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Kinetic Assembly of Near-IR-Active Gold Nanoclusters Using Weakly Adsorbing Polymers to Control the Size
Jasmine M. Tam,Avinash K. Murthy,Davis R. Ingram,Robin Nguyen,Konstantin V Sokolov,Keith P. Johnston +5 more
TL;DR: The generality of this kinetic assembly platform is demonstrated for gold nanoparticles with a range of surface charges from highly negative to neutral with the two different polymers.
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Utility of biodegradable plasmonic nanoclusters in photoacoustic imaging.
Soon Joon Yoon,Srivalleesha Mallidi,Jasmine M. Tam,Justina O. Tam,Avinash K. Murthy,Keith P. Johnston,Konstantin V Sokolov,Stanislav Emelianov +7 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the biodegradable gold nanoclusters can be used as effective contrast agents in photoacoustic imaging.
Thermal stability of biodegradable plasmonic nanoclusters in photoacoustic imaging.
TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that 40 nm and 80 nm biodegradable nanoclusters demonstrate higher photothermal stability compared to gold nanorods and can be effectively used for photoacoustic imaging and photothermal therapy.
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