Thin films consisting of Ag and Au nanoparticles embedded in amorphous ZrO2
matrix were grown by pulsed laser deposition in a wide range of metal volume
concentrations in the dielectric regime (0.08<x(Ag)<0.28 and 0.08<x(Au)<0.52).
High resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed regular
distribution of spherical Au and Ag nanoparticles having very sharp interfaces
with the amorphous matrix. Mean particle size determined from X-ray diffraction
agreed with direct TEM observation. The silver mean diameter increases more
abruptly with metal volume content than that corresponding to gold particles
prepared under the same conditions. Two mechanisms of particle growing are
observed: nucleation and particle coalescence, their relative significance
being different in both granular systems, which yields very different values of
the percolation threshold (xc(Ag)~0.28 and xc(Au)~0.52).Comment: 6 figure