Anatase TiO(2) single crystals with exposed {001} and {110} facets have been successfully synthesized using a modified hydrothermal technique in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and hydrofluoric acid solution; these single crystals exhibited enhanced photocatalytic activities for degradation of Methylene Blue dye under ultraviolet light irradiation.
The separation of CO₂ from a mixture of CO₂ and N₂ using a porous graphene membrane was investigated using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The effects of chemical functionalization of the graphene sheet and pore rim on the gas separation performance of porous graphene membranes were examined. It was found that chemical functionalization of the graphene sheet can increase the absorption ability of CO₂, while chemical functionalization of the pore rim can significantly improve the selectivity of CO₂ over N₂. The results show that the porous graphene membrane with all-N modified pore-16 exhibits a higher CO₂ selectivity over N₂ (∼11) due to the enhanced electrostatic interactions compared to the unmodified graphene membrane. This demonstrates the potential use of functionalized porous graphene as single-atom-thick membrane for CO₂ and N₂ separation. We provide an effective way to improve the gas separation performance of porous graphene membranes, which may be useful for designing new concept membranes for other gases.
Potential energy surfaces are the central concept in understanding the assembly of molecules; atoms form molecules via covalent bonds with structures defined by the stationary points of the surfaces. Similarly, dispersion interactions give Lennard-Jones potentials that describe atomic clusters and liquids. The formation of molecules and clusters can follow various pathways depending on the initial conditions and the potentials. Here we show that analogous mechanistic effects occur in light-mediated self-organization of metal nanoparticles; atoms are replaced by silver nanoparticles that are arranged by electrodynamic (that is, optical trapping and optical binding) interactions. We demonstrate this concept using simple Gaussian optical fields and the formation of stable clusters with various two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) geometries. The formation of specific clusters is 'path-dependent'; the particle motions follow an electrodynamic potential energy surface. This work paves the way for rational design of photonic clusters with combinations of imposed beam shapes, gradients and optical binding interactions.
We demonstrate assembly of spheroidal Ag nanoparticle clusters, chains and arrays induced by optical binding. Particles with diameters of 40 nm formed ordered clusters and chains in aqueous solution when illuminated by shaped optical fields with a wavelength of 800 nm; specifically, close-packed clusters were formed in cylindrically symmetric optical traps, and linear chains were formed in line traps. We developed a coupled-dipole model to calculate the optical forces between an arbitrary number of particles and successfully predicted the experimentally observed particle separations and arrangements as well as their dependence on the polarization of the incident light. This demonstrates that the interaction between these small Ag particles and light is well described by approximating the particles as point dipoles, showing that these experiments extend optical binding into the Rayleigh regime. For larger Ag nanoparticles, with diameters of approximately 100 nm, the optical-binding forces become comparable to the largest gradient forces in the optical trap, and the particles can arrange themselves into regular arrays or synthetic photonic lattices. Finally, we discuss the differences between our experimental observations and the point dipole theory and suggest factors that prevent the Ag nanoparticles from aggregating as expected from the theory.
We report the first experimental realization of all-optical trapping and manipulation of plasmonic nanowires in three dimensions. The optical beam used for trapping is the Fourier transform of a linearly polarized Bessel beam (termed FT-Bessel). The extended depth of focus of this beam enables the use of a retroreflection geometry to cancel radiation pressure in the beam propagation direction, making it possible to trap highly scattering and absorbing silver nanowires. Individual silver nanowires with lengths of several micrometers can be positioned by the trapping beam with a precision better than 100 nm and are oriented by the polarization of the trapping light with a precision of approximately 1°. Multiple nanowires can be trapped simultaneously in spatially separated maxima of the trapping field. Since trapping in the interferometric FT-Bessel potential is robust in bulk solution and near surfaces, it will enable the controlled assembly of metal nanowires into plasmonic nanostructures.
Optical forces acting on metallic nanoparticles can be used to organize mesoscale arrays for various applications. Here, we show that silver nanoparticles can be deposited as ordered arrays and chains on chemically modified substrates using a simple and facile optical trapping approach that we term "optical printing". The deposited patterns show preferred separations between nanoparticles resulting from their electrodynamic coupling (i.e., optical binding) in the electromagnetic field of the optical trapping beam. Centrosymmetric optical traps readily allow simultaneous deposition of nanoparticle pairs and triples maintaining the interparticle geometries present in solution. Repositioning an optical line trap with small intercolumn separations allows selectively sampling low and high energy parts of the interparticle potentials. We find that the preferred particle arrangements controllably change from rectangular and triangular to near-field aggregates as one forces the separation to be small. The separation affects the interactions. Interpretation of the results is facilitated by electrodynamic simulations of optical forces. This optical printing approach, which enables efficient fabrication of dense nanoparticle arrays with nanoscale positional precision, is being employed for quantum optics and enhanced sensing measurements.
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