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Building the Nanoplasmonics Toolbox Through Shape Modeling and Single Particle Optical Studies

Posted on:2013-04-16Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Northwestern UniversityCandidate:Ringe, EmilieFull Text:PDF
GTID:2451390008984011Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Interest in nanotechnology is driven by unprecedented properties tailorability, achievable by controlling particle structure and composition. Unlike bulk components, minute changes in size and shape affect the optical and electronic properties of nanoparticles. Characterization of such structure-function relationships and better understanding of structure control mechanisms is crucial to the development of applications such as plasmonic sensors and devices. The objective of the current research is thus twofold: to theoretically predict and understand how shape is controlled by synthesis conditions, and to experimentally unravel, through single particle studies, how shape, composition, size, and surrounding environment affect plasmonic properties in noble metal particles. Quantitative, predictive rules and fundamental knowledge obtained from this research contributes to the "nanoplasmonics toolbox", a library designed to provide scientists and engineers the tools to create and optimize novel nanotechnology applications.;In this dissertation, single particle approaches are developed and used to unravel the effects of size, shape, substrate, aggregation state and surrounding environment on the optical response of metallic nanoparticles. Ag and Au nanocubes on different substrates are first presented, followed by the discussion of the concept of plasmon length, a universal parameter to describe plasmon energy for a variety of particle shapes and plasmon modes. Plasmonic sensing (both refractive index sensing and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy) and polarization effects are then studied at the single particle level.;In the last two Chapters, analytical shape models based on the Wulff construction provide unique modeling tools for alloy and kinetically grown nanoparticles. The former reveals a size-dependence of the shape of small alloy particles (such as those used in catalysis) because of surface segregation, while the latter uniquely models the shape of many particles commonly studied for plasmonic applications.;The new models and descriptive parameters developed in this work help predict and understand shape and size effects in metal nanoparticles relevant for interdisciplinary applications of plasmonics, and help guide both non-specialists and nanotechnology researchers.
Keywords/Search Tags:Particle, Shape, Plasmonic, Nanotechnology, Optical, Size, Applications
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