https://www.selleckchem.com/products/abtl-0812.html Cyclic voltammetry is demonstrated as a useful method to model equilibrium binding between quantum dots and redox active small molecules. Specifically, the interaction of a library of ferrocene derivatives with CdSe quantum dots is examined. For the strongly interacting systems, ferrocene carboxylic acid (FcCOOH) and ferrocene hexanethiol (Fc-hexSH), the binding equilibria can be quantitatively deduced by modeling the cyclic voltammetry data. This modeling allows extraction of the diffusion coefficients, equilibrium constants associated with both the reduced and oxidized species, and forward and reverse rates associated with binding for both the reduced and oxidized species. Taken together these data give direct insight into the binding of small molecules to quantum-dot surfaces as a function of oxidation state, critical information for the design of quantum dots as photoredox catalysts and charge transfer mediators.Micromanipulation by optical tweezers mainly relies on the trapping force derived from the intensity gradient of light. Here we show that the synergy of intensity, phase, and polarization in structured light allows versatile optical manipulation of nanostructures. When a metal nanoparticle is confined by a linearly polarized laser field, the sign of optical force depends on the particle shape and the laser intensity, phase, and polarization profiles. By tuning these parameters in optical line traps, optical trapping, transporting, and sorting of silver nanostructures have been demonstrated. These findings inspired us to control the motion of nanostructures with designed intensity, phase, and polarization of light using holographic optical tweezers with advanced beam shaping techniques. This work provides a new perspective on active colloidal nanomanipulation in fully controlled optical landscapes, which largely expands the existing optical manipulation toolbox.The biosynthetic pathway of the prenylated