2014
DOI: 10.1117/12.2073886
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Plasmon and compositional mapping of plasmonic nanostructures

Abstract: Recently, co-reduction of Au and Pd has allowed the synthesis of complex Au core/AuPd shell nanoparticles with elongated tips and cubic-like symmetry. Optical studies have shown strong plasmonic behavior and high refractive index sensitivities. In this paper, we describe the composition and the near-field plasmonic behavior of those complex structures. Monochromated STEM-EELS, Cathodoluminescence, and EDS mapping reveals the different resonant modes in these particles, and shows that Pd, a poor plasmonic metal… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
(59 reference statements)
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“…For the representative 166 nm diameter Al nanocrystal studied here, three prominent LSPR modes were found: the lowest energy at 3.3 eV and intermediate energy modes at 5.5 and 7.1 eV (Figure b). Plasmon maps (Figure c) were generated from plotting the contribution of each resonant mode at each pixel for the modes (Figure b) extracted from the STEM-EELS data cube with non-negative matrix functionalization (performed in HYPERSPY). , These maps consistently display 3-fold symmetry, corroborating the CL results. The field intensity for the lowest energy dipolar 3.3 eV plasmon mode (Figure c, top) is strongly localized at the tips of the particle, similar to the lower energy modes of a nanocube. , The 5.5 eV mode (Figure c, center) is a quadrupolar LSPR with field intensity localized at the faces of the structure; analogies can again be made with the face mode of a nanocube .…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…For the representative 166 nm diameter Al nanocrystal studied here, three prominent LSPR modes were found: the lowest energy at 3.3 eV and intermediate energy modes at 5.5 and 7.1 eV (Figure b). Plasmon maps (Figure c) were generated from plotting the contribution of each resonant mode at each pixel for the modes (Figure b) extracted from the STEM-EELS data cube with non-negative matrix functionalization (performed in HYPERSPY). , These maps consistently display 3-fold symmetry, corroborating the CL results. The field intensity for the lowest energy dipolar 3.3 eV plasmon mode (Figure c, top) is strongly localized at the tips of the particle, similar to the lower energy modes of a nanocube. , The 5.5 eV mode (Figure c, center) is a quadrupolar LSPR with field intensity localized at the faces of the structure; analogies can again be made with the face mode of a nanocube .…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…The multidimensional data array (164 × 164 pixels region of interest, 2048 energy channels, 3 tilts for the particle in Figs 2a - 3 , Supplementary Fig. 7 ) was analyzed using blind source separation of decomposed modes from non-negative matrix factorization performed in HYPERSPY 24 39 47 . This approach decomposes the intrinsically redundant information of a spectrum image (SI) into a number of spectral components (spectral factors) that are multiplied by different coefficients (loadings) at each pixel to best fit the SI.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, recent studies of alloy plasmons illustrate the potential contributions of EELS characterization. ,,, Ringe et al investigated Au–Pd octopods, suggesting that Au alloys containing a poor plasmonic metal (Pd) can still sustain localized LSPRs. Tran et al examined nonuniform Au–Pd nanoparticles obtained from a microbial synthesis and observed a significant difference when placing the electron beam at Au-rich and Pd-rich regions within a single nanoparticle.…”
Section: Probing Surface Plasmons With Stem/eelsmentioning
confidence: 99%