49 research outputs found
Controlling the Interplay of Electric and Magnetic Modes via Fano-like Plasmon Resonances
Assemblies of strongly coupled plasmonic nanoparticles can support highly tunable electric and magnetic resonances in the visible spectrum. In this Letter, we theoretically demonstrate Fano-like interference effects between the fields radiated by the electric and magnetic modes of symmetric nanoparticle trimers. Breaking the symmetry of the trimer system leads to a strong interaction between the modes. The near and far-field electromagnetic properties of the broken symmetry trimer are tunable across a large spectral range. We exploit this Fano-like effect to demonstrate spatial and temporal control of the localized electromagnetic hotspots in the plasmonic trimer
Enantioselective Optical Trapping of Chiral Nanoparticles with Plasmonic Tweezers
Enantiomer separation is a critical
step in many chemical syntheses,
particularly for pharmaceuticals, but prevailing chemical methods
remain inefficient. Here, we introduce an optical technique to sort
chiral specimens using coaxial plasmonic apertures. These apertures
are composed of a deeply subwavelength silica channel embedded in
silver and can stably trap sub-20 nm dielectric nanoparticles. Using
both full-field simulations and analytic calculations, we show that
selective trapping of enantiomers can be achieved with circularly
polarized illumination. Opposite enantiomers experience distinct trapping
forces in both sign and magnitude: one is trapped in a deep potential
well, while the other is repelled with a potential barrier. These
potentials maintain opposite signs across a range of chiral polarizabilities
and enantiomer–aperture separations. Our theory indicates that
the interaction of chiral light and chiral specimens can be mediated
by achiral plasmonic apertures, providing a possible route toward
all-optical enantiopure syntheses
Controlling the Interplay of Electric and Magnetic Modes via Fano-like Plasmon Resonances
Assemblies of strongly coupled plasmonic nanoparticles can support highly tunable electric and magnetic resonances in the visible spectrum. In this Letter, we theoretically demonstrate Fano-like interference effects between the fields radiated by the electric and magnetic modes of symmetric nanoparticle trimers. Breaking the symmetry of the trimer system leads to a strong interaction between the modes. The near and far-field electromagnetic properties of the broken symmetry trimer are tunable across a large spectral range. We exploit this Fano-like effect to demonstrate spatial and temporal control of the localized electromagnetic hotspots in the plasmonic trimer
Electron and Light Induced Stimulated Raman Spectroscopy for Nanoscale Molecular Mapping
We propose and theoretically analyze a new vibrational spectroscopy, termed electron- and light-induced stimulated Raman (ELISR) scattering, that combines the high spatial resolution of electron microscopy with the molecular sensitivity of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. With ELISR, electron-beam excitation of plasmonic nanoparticles is utilized as a spectrally-broadband but spatially-confined Stokes beam in the presence of a diffraction-limited pump laser. To characterize this technique, we develop a numerical model and conduct full-field electromagnetic simulations to investigate two distinct nanoparticle geometries, nanorods and nanospheres, coated with a Raman-active material. Our results show the significant (-) stimulated Raman enhancement that is achieved with dual electron and optical excitation of these nanoparticle geometries. Importantly, the spatial resolution of this vibrational spectroscopy for electron microscopy is solely determined by the nanoparticle geometry and the plasmon mode volume. Our results highlight the promise of ELISR for simultaneous high-resolution electron microscopy with sub-diffraction-limited Raman spectroscopy, complementing advances in superresolution microscopy, correlated light and electron microscopy, and vibrational electron energy loss spectroscopy
Controlling the Interplay of Electric and Magnetic Modes via Fano-like Plasmon Resonances
Assemblies of strongly coupled plasmonic nanoparticles can support highly tunable electric and magnetic resonances in the visible spectrum. In this Letter, we theoretically demonstrate Fano-like interference effects between the fields radiated by the electric and magnetic modes of symmetric nanoparticle trimers. Breaking the symmetry of the trimer system leads to a strong interaction between the modes. The near and far-field electromagnetic properties of the broken symmetry trimer are tunable across a large spectral range. We exploit this Fano-like effect to demonstrate spatial and temporal control of the localized electromagnetic hotspots in the plasmonic trimer
Lattice-Resolution, Dynamic Imaging of Hydrogen Absorption into Bimetallic AgPd Nanoparticles
Palladium’s
strong reactivity and absorption affinity to
H2 makes it a prime material for hydrogen-based technologies.
Alloying of Pd has been used to tune its mechanical stability, catalytic
activity, and absorption thermodynamics. However, atomistic mechanisms
of hydrogen dissociation and intercalation are informed predominantly
by theoretical calculations, owing to the difficulty in imaging dynamic
metal–gas interactions at the atomic scale. Here, we use in situ environmental high resolution transmission electron
microscopy to directly track the hydrogenation-induced lattice expansion
within AgPd triangular nanoprisms. We investigate the thermodynamics
of the system at the single particle level and show that, contrary
to pure Pd nanoparticles, the AgPd system exhibits α/β
coexistence within single crystalline nanoparticles in equilibrium;
the nanoparticle system also moves to a solid-solution loading mechanism
at lower Ag content than bulk. By tracking the lattice expansion in
real time during a phase transition, we see surface-limited β
phase growth, as well as rapid reorientation of the α/β
interface within individual particles. This secondary rate corresponds
to the speed with which the β phase can restructure and, according
to our atomistic calculations, emerges from lattice strain minimization.
We also observe no preferential nucleation at the sharpest nanoprism
corners, contrary to classical nucleation theory. Our results achieve
atomic lattice plane resolutioncrucial for exploring the role
of crystal defects and single atom sites on catalytic hydrogen splitting
and absorption
Lattice-Resolution, Dynamic Imaging of Hydrogen Absorption into Bimetallic AgPd Nanoparticles
Palladium’s
strong reactivity and absorption affinity to
H2 makes it a prime material for hydrogen-based technologies.
Alloying of Pd has been used to tune its mechanical stability, catalytic
activity, and absorption thermodynamics. However, atomistic mechanisms
of hydrogen dissociation and intercalation are informed predominantly
by theoretical calculations, owing to the difficulty in imaging dynamic
metal–gas interactions at the atomic scale. Here, we use in situ environmental high resolution transmission electron
microscopy to directly track the hydrogenation-induced lattice expansion
within AgPd triangular nanoprisms. We investigate the thermodynamics
of the system at the single particle level and show that, contrary
to pure Pd nanoparticles, the AgPd system exhibits α/β
coexistence within single crystalline nanoparticles in equilibrium;
the nanoparticle system also moves to a solid-solution loading mechanism
at lower Ag content than bulk. By tracking the lattice expansion in
real time during a phase transition, we see surface-limited β
phase growth, as well as rapid reorientation of the α/β
interface within individual particles. This secondary rate corresponds
to the speed with which the β phase can restructure and, according
to our atomistic calculations, emerges from lattice strain minimization.
We also observe no preferential nucleation at the sharpest nanoprism
corners, contrary to classical nucleation theory. Our results achieve
atomic lattice plane resolutioncrucial for exploring the role
of crystal defects and single atom sites on catalytic hydrogen splitting
and absorption
Lattice-Resolution, Dynamic Imaging of Hydrogen Absorption into Bimetallic AgPd Nanoparticles
Palladium’s
strong reactivity and absorption affinity to
H2 makes it a prime material for hydrogen-based technologies.
Alloying of Pd has been used to tune its mechanical stability, catalytic
activity, and absorption thermodynamics. However, atomistic mechanisms
of hydrogen dissociation and intercalation are informed predominantly
by theoretical calculations, owing to the difficulty in imaging dynamic
metal–gas interactions at the atomic scale. Here, we use in situ environmental high resolution transmission electron
microscopy to directly track the hydrogenation-induced lattice expansion
within AgPd triangular nanoprisms. We investigate the thermodynamics
of the system at the single particle level and show that, contrary
to pure Pd nanoparticles, the AgPd system exhibits α/β
coexistence within single crystalline nanoparticles in equilibrium;
the nanoparticle system also moves to a solid-solution loading mechanism
at lower Ag content than bulk. By tracking the lattice expansion in
real time during a phase transition, we see surface-limited β
phase growth, as well as rapid reorientation of the α/β
interface within individual particles. This secondary rate corresponds
to the speed with which the β phase can restructure and, according
to our atomistic calculations, emerges from lattice strain minimization.
We also observe no preferential nucleation at the sharpest nanoprism
corners, contrary to classical nucleation theory. Our results achieve
atomic lattice plane resolutioncrucial for exploring the role
of crystal defects and single atom sites on catalytic hydrogen splitting
and absorption
Lattice-Resolution, Dynamic Imaging of Hydrogen Absorption into Bimetallic AgPd Nanoparticles
Palladium’s
strong reactivity and absorption affinity to
H2 makes it a prime material for hydrogen-based technologies.
Alloying of Pd has been used to tune its mechanical stability, catalytic
activity, and absorption thermodynamics. However, atomistic mechanisms
of hydrogen dissociation and intercalation are informed predominantly
by theoretical calculations, owing to the difficulty in imaging dynamic
metal–gas interactions at the atomic scale. Here, we use in situ environmental high resolution transmission electron
microscopy to directly track the hydrogenation-induced lattice expansion
within AgPd triangular nanoprisms. We investigate the thermodynamics
of the system at the single particle level and show that, contrary
to pure Pd nanoparticles, the AgPd system exhibits α/β
coexistence within single crystalline nanoparticles in equilibrium;
the nanoparticle system also moves to a solid-solution loading mechanism
at lower Ag content than bulk. By tracking the lattice expansion in
real time during a phase transition, we see surface-limited β
phase growth, as well as rapid reorientation of the α/β
interface within individual particles. This secondary rate corresponds
to the speed with which the β phase can restructure and, according
to our atomistic calculations, emerges from lattice strain minimization.
We also observe no preferential nucleation at the sharpest nanoprism
corners, contrary to classical nucleation theory. Our results achieve
atomic lattice plane resolutioncrucial for exploring the role
of crystal defects and single atom sites on catalytic hydrogen splitting
and absorption
Tunable Color Filters Based on Metal−Insulator−Metal Resonators
We report a method for filtering white light into individual colors using metal−insulator−metal resonators. The resonators are designed to support photonic modes at visible frequencies, and dispersion relations are developed for realistic experimental configurations. Experimental results indicate that passive Ag/Si3N4/Au resonators exhibit color filtering across the entire visible spectrum. Full field electromagnetic simulations were performed on active resonators for which the resonator length was varied from 1−3 μm and the output slit depth was systematically varied throughout the thickness of the dielectric layer. These resonators are shown to filter colors based on interference between the optical modes within the dielectric layer. By careful design of the output coupling, the resonator can selectively couple to intensity maxima of different photonic modes and, as a result, preferentially select any of the primary colors. We also illustrate how refractive index modulation in metal−insulator−metal resonators can yield actively tunable color filters. Simulations using lithium niobate as the dielectric layer and the top and bottom Ag layers as electrodes, indicate that the output color can be tuned over the visible spectrum with an applied field
