Further Reading

Review Articles

  1. Aharonovich, I., Greentree, A.D., and Prawer, S. (2011). Diamond photonics. Nat Photon 5: 397–405.
  2. Barnard, A.S. (2009). Diamond standard in diagnostics: nanodiamond biolabels make their mark. Analyst 134: 1751–1764.
  3. Castelletto, S., Li, X., and Gu, M. (2012). Frontiers in diffraction unlimited optical methods for spin manipulation, magnetic field sensing and imaging using diamond nitrogen vacancy defects. Nanophotonics 1: 139–153.
  4. Chaudhary, H.M., Duttagupta, A.S., Jadhav, K.R. et al. (2015). Nanodiamonds as a new horizon for pharmaceutical and biomedical applications. Curr Drug Deliv 12: 271–281.
  5. Chen, X. and Zhang, W. (2017). Diamond nanostructures for drug delivery, bioimaging, and biosensing. Chem Soc Rev 46: 734–760.
  6. Chipaux, M., van der Laan, K.J., Hemelaar, S.R. et al. (2018). Nanodiamonds and their applications in cells. Small 14: 1704263.
  7. Drezet, A., Sonnefraud, Y., Cuche, A. et al. (2015). Near‐field microscopy with a scanning nitrogen‐vacancy color center in a diamond nanocrystal: a brief review. Micron 70: 55–63.
  8. Holt, K.B. (2007). Diamond at the nanoscale: applications of diamond nanoparticles from cellular biomarkers to quantum computing. Phil Trans R Soc A 365: 2845–2861.
  9. Krueger, A. (2008). Diamond nanoparticles: jewels for chemistry and physics. Adv Mater 20: 2445–2449.
  10. van der Laan, K., Hasani, M., Zheng, T., and Schirhagl, R, (2018). Nanodiamonds for in vivo applications. Small 14: 1703838.
  11. Lai, L. and Barnard, A.S. (2015). ...

Get Fluorescent Nanodiamonds now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.