Three-Dimensional Plasmonic Chiral Tetramers Assembled
by DNA Origami
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Abstract
Molecular
chemistry offers a unique toolkit to draw inspiration
for the design of artificial metamolecules. For a long time, optical
circular dichroism has been exclusively the terrain of natural chiral
molecules, which exhibit optical activity mainly in the UV spectral
range, thus greatly hindering their significance for a broad range
of applications. Here we demonstrate that circular dichroism can be
generated with artificial plasmonic chiral nanostructures composed
of the minimum number of spherical gold nanoparticles required for
three-dimensional (3D) chirality. We utilize a rigid addressable DNA
origami template to precisely organize four nominally identical gold
nanoparticles into a three-dimensional asymmetric tetramer. Because
of the chiral structural symmetry and the strong plasmonic resonant
coupling between the gold nanoparticles, the 3D plasmonic assemblies
undergo different interactions with left and right circularly polarized
light, leading to pronounced circular dichroism. Our experimental
results agree well with theoretical predictions. The simplicity of
our structure geometry and, most importantly, the concept of resorting
on biology to produce artificial photonic functionalities open a new
pathway to designing smart artificial plasmonic nanostructures for
large-scale production of optically active metamaterials