Acoustic vibrations of assemblies of gold nanoparticles were investigated using ultralow frequency micro-Raman scattering and finite element simulations. When exciting the assemblies resonantly with the surface plasmon resonance of electromagnetically coupled nanoparticles, Raman spectra present an ultralow frequency band whose frequency lies below the lowest Raman active Lamb mode of single nanoparticles that was observed. This feature was ascribed to a Raman vibration mode of gold nanoparticle "supermolecules", that is, nanoparticles mechanically coupled by surrounding polymer molecules. Its measured frequency is inversely proportional to the nanoparticle diameter and sensitive to the elastic properties of the interstitial polymer. The latter dependence as well as finite element simulations suggest that this mode corresponds to the out-of-phase semirigid translation (l = 1 Lamb mode) of each nanoparticle of a dimer inside the matrix, activated by the mechanical coupling between the nanoparticles. These observations were permitted only thanks to the resonant excitation with the coupling plasmon excitation, leading to an enhancement up to 10(4) of the scattering by these vibrations. This enhanced ultralow frequency Raman scattering thus opens a new route to probe the local elastic properties of the surrounding medium.
Resonant acoustic modes of ultrathin CdS and CdSe colloidal nanoplatelets (NPLs) with varying thicknesses were probed using low frequency Raman scattering. The spectra are dominated by an intense band ascribed to the thickness breathing mode of the 2D nanostructures. The measured Raman frequencies show strong deviations with respect to the values expected for simple bare plates, all the more so as the thickness is reduced. The deviation is shown to arise from the additional mass of the organic ligands that are bound to the free surfaces of the nanoplatelets. The calculated eigen frequencies of vibrating platelets weighed down by the mass of the organic ligands are in very good agreement with the observed experimental behaviours. This finding opens up a new possibility of nanomechanical sensing such as nanobalances.
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