7 research outputs found
Chemically Isolating Hot Spots on Concave Nanocubes
We report a simple and general strategy for selectively
exposing
and functionalizing the sharp corners of concave nanocubes, which
are the SERS hot spots for such structures. This strategy takes advantage
of the unique shape of the concave cubes by coating the particles
with silica and then etching it away to expose only the corner regions,
while maintaining the silica coating in the concave faces. These corner
regions can then be selectively modified for improved enhancement
and signal response with SERS
Systematic Study of Antibonding Modes in Gold Nanorod Dimers and Trimers
Using on-wire lithography to synthesize
well-defined nanorod dimers and trimers, we report a systematic study
of the plasmon coupling properties of such materials. By comparing
the dimer/trimer structures to discrete nanorods of the same overall
length, we demonstrate many similarities between antibonding coupled
modes in the dimers/trimers and higher-order resonances in the discrete
nanorods. These conclusions are validated with a combination of discrete
dipole approximation and finite-difference time-domain calculations
and lead to the observation of antibonding modes in symmetric structures
by measuring their solution-dispersed extinction spectra. Finally,
we probe the effects of asymmetry and gap size on the occurrence of
these modes and demonstrate that the delocalized nature of the antibonding
modes lead to longer-range coupling compared to the stronger bonding
modes
Long-Range Plasmophore Rulers
Using on-wire lithography, we studied
the emission properties of
nanostructures made of a polythiophene disk separated by fixed nanoscopic
distances from a plasmonic gold nanorod. The intense plasmonic field
generated by the nanorod modifies the shape of the polythiophene emission
spectrum, and the strong distance dependence of this modulation forms
the basis for a new type of “plasmophore ruler”. Simulations
using the discrete dipole approximation (DDA) quantitatively support
our experimental results. Importantly, this plasmophore ruler is independent
of signal intensity and is effective up to 100 nm, which is more than
two times larger than any reported value for rulers based on photoluminescence
processes
Electrochemical Deposition of Conformal and Functional Layers on High Aspect Ratio Silicon Micro/Nanowires
Development
of new synthetic methods for the modification of nanostructures
has accelerated materials design advances to furnish complex architectures.
Structures based on one-dimensional (1D) silicon (Si) structures synthesized
using top-down and bottom-up methods are especially prominent for
diverse applications in chemistry, physics, and medicine. Yet further
elaboration of these structures with distinct metal-based and polymeric
materials, which could open up new opportunities, has been difficult.
We present a general electrochemical method for the deposition of
conformal layers of various materials onto high aspect ratio Si micro-
and nanowire arrays. The electrochemical deposition of a library of
coaxial layers comprising metals, metal oxides, and organic/inorganic
semiconductors demonstrate the materials generality of the synthesis
technique. Depositions may be performed on wire arrays with varying
diameter (70 nm to 4 μm), pitch (5 μ to 15 μ), aspect
ratio (4:1 to 75:1), shape (cylindrical, conical, hourglass), resistivity
(0.001–0.01 to 1–10 ohm/cm<sup>2</sup>), and substrate
orientation. Anisotropic physical etching of wires with one or more
coaxial shells yields 1D structures with exposed tips that can be
further site-specifically modified by an electrochemical deposition
approach. The electrochemical deposition methodology described herein
features a wafer-scale synthesis platform for the preparation of multifunctional
nanoscale devices based on a 1D Si substrate
Observation of Selective Plasmon-Exciton Coupling in Nonradiative Energy Transfer: Donor-Selective versus Acceptor-Selective Plexcitons
We report selectively plasmon-mediated
nonradiative energy transfer between quantum dot (QD) emitters interacting
with each other via Förster-type resonance energy transfer
(FRET) under controlled plasmon coupling either to only the donor
QDs (i.e., donor-selective) or to only the acceptor QDs (i.e., acceptor-selective).
Using layer-by-layer assembled colloidal QD nanocrystal solids with
metal nanoparticles integrated at carefully designed spacing, we demonstrate
the ability to enable/disable the coupled plasmon-exciton (plexciton)
formation distinctly at the donor (exciton departing) site or at the
acceptor (exciton feeding) site of our choice, while not hindering
the donor exciton-acceptor exciton interaction but refraining from
simultaneous coupling to both sites of the donor and the acceptor
in the FRET process. In the case of donor-selective plexciton, we
observed a substantial shortening in the donor QD lifetime from 1.33
to 0.29 ns as a result of plasmon-coupling to the donors and the FRET-assisted
exciton transfer from the donors to the acceptors, both of which shorten
the donor lifetime. This consequently enhanced the acceptor emission
by a factor of 1.93. On the other hand, in the complementary case
of acceptor-selective plexciton we observed a 2.70-fold emission enhancement
in the acceptor QDs, larger than the acceptor emission enhancement
of the donor-selective plexciton, as a result of the combined effects
of the acceptor plasmon coupling and the FRET-assisted exciton feeding.
Here we present the comparative results of theoretical modeling of
the donor- and acceptor-selective plexcitons of nonradiative energy
transfer developed here for the first time, which are in excellent
agreement with the systematic experimental characterization. Such
an ability to modify and control energy transfer through mastering
plexcitons is of fundamental importance, opening up new applications
for quantum dot embedded plexciton devices along with the development
of new techniques in FRET-based fluorescence microscopy
Solution-Dispersible Metal Nanorings with Deliberately Controllable Compositions and Architectural Parameters for Tunable Plasmonic Response
We report a template-based technique
for the preparation of solution-dispersible nanorings composed of
Au, Ag, Pt, Ni, and Pd with control over outer diameter (60–400
nm), inner diameter (25–230 nm), and height (40 nm to a few
microns). Systematic and independent control of these parameters enables
fine-tuning of the three characteristic localized surface plasmon
resonance modes of Au nanorings and the resulting solution-based extinction
spectra from the visible to the near-infrared. This synthetic approach
provides a new pathway for solution-based investigations of surfaces
with negative curvature