TY - JOUR
T1 - A nanofabricated plasmonic core–shell-nanoparticle library
AU - Susarrey Arce, Arturo
AU - Czajkowsk, Krzysztof M.
AU - Darmadi, Iwan
AU - Nilsson, Sara
AU - Tanyeli, Irem
AU - Alekseeva, Svetlana
AU - Antosiewicz, Tomasz J.
AU - Langhammer, Christoph
PY - 2019/10/21
Y1 - 2019/10/21
N2 - Three-layer core–shell-nanoparticle nanoarchitectures exhibit properties
not achievable by single-element nanostructures alone and have great
potential to enable rationally designed functionality. However,
nanofabrication strategies for crafting core–shell-nanoparticle
structure arrays on surfaces are widely lacking, despite the potential
of basically unlimited material combinations. Here we present a
nanofabrication approach that overcomes this limitation. Using it, we
produce a library of nanoarchitectures composed of a metal core and an
oxide/nitride shell that is decorated with few-nanometer-sized particles
with widely different material combinations. This is enabled by
resolving a long-standing challenge in this field, namely the ability to
grow a shell layer around a nanofabricated core without prior removal
of the lithographically patterned mask, and the possibility to
subsequently grow smaller metal nanoparticles locally on the shell only
in close proximity of the core. Focusing on the application of such
nanoarchitectures in plasmonics, we show experimentally and by
Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) simulations that these structures
exhibit significant optical absorption enhancement in small metal
nanoparticles grown on the few nanometer thin dielectric shell layer
around a plasmonic core, and derive design rules to maximize the effect
by the tailored combination of the core and shell materials. We predict
that these structures will find application in plasmon-mediated
catalysis and nanoplasmonic sensing and spectroscopy.
AB - Three-layer core–shell-nanoparticle nanoarchitectures exhibit properties
not achievable by single-element nanostructures alone and have great
potential to enable rationally designed functionality. However,
nanofabrication strategies for crafting core–shell-nanoparticle
structure arrays on surfaces are widely lacking, despite the potential
of basically unlimited material combinations. Here we present a
nanofabrication approach that overcomes this limitation. Using it, we
produce a library of nanoarchitectures composed of a metal core and an
oxide/nitride shell that is decorated with few-nanometer-sized particles
with widely different material combinations. This is enabled by
resolving a long-standing challenge in this field, namely the ability to
grow a shell layer around a nanofabricated core without prior removal
of the lithographically patterned mask, and the possibility to
subsequently grow smaller metal nanoparticles locally on the shell only
in close proximity of the core. Focusing on the application of such
nanoarchitectures in plasmonics, we show experimentally and by
Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) simulations that these structures
exhibit significant optical absorption enhancement in small metal
nanoparticles grown on the few nanometer thin dielectric shell layer
around a plasmonic core, and derive design rules to maximize the effect
by the tailored combination of the core and shell materials. We predict
that these structures will find application in plasmon-mediated
catalysis and nanoplasmonic sensing and spectroscopy.
KW - n/a OA procedure
U2 - 10.1039/c9nr08097j
DO - 10.1039/c9nr08097j
M3 - Article
SN - 2040-3364
SP - 21207
EP - 21217
JO - Nanoscale
JF - Nanoscale
IS - 44
ER -