Plasmonic Control and Stabilization of Asymmetric Light Scattering from Ag Nanocubes on TiO.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Institute of Industrial Science, The University of Tokyo, 4-6-1 Komaba, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8505, Japan.

Published: March 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasmonic nanoparticles on semiconductor substrates lead to resonance mode splitting, asymmetric light scattering, and site-selective nanoetching due to charge separation at their interface.
  • By exploiting these effects, researchers developed photofunctional materials that allow for one-way translucent images and multicolor scattering images using Ag nanocubes on TiO, with specific etching techniques to manipulate light properties.
  • To enhance stability, methods such as polymer coating to slow down charge separation and switching to diamond substrates that don’t accept electrons were implemented, showing Ag nanocubes maintain stability even at high temperatures.

Article Abstract

When plasmonic nanoparticles are placed on a highly refractive semiconductor substrate, we can expect three different effects: (i) resonance mode splitting, (ii) asymmetric light scattering based on the split modes, and (iii) site-selective nanoetching due to plasmon-induced charge separation (PICS) at the nanoparticle-semiconductor interface. Here, we develop novel photofunctional materials by taking advantage of those three effects. More specifically, we control the asymmetric scattering of Ag nanocubes on TiO by PICS, so as to develop materials for photodrawing of one-way visible translucent images and multicolor scattering images. The one-way visible translucent images, which are translucent scattering images visible only from the back side, are drawn by anaerobic bottom-selective etching of the Ag nanocubes. For drawing the multicolor scattering images, a scattering color of Ag nanocubes is changed from yellow to green by the anaerobic bottom-selective etching and from yellow to red by aerobic nonselective etching. We also theoretically and experimentally examined the contribution of a possible thermal effect to the nanoetching, and revealed that the contribution is negligible; Ag nanocubes on TiO are stable even at 473 K for 2 h in the dark, whereas the theoretically expected temperature increase under light is less than 1 K. In addition, we developed methods to stabilize the Ag nanocubes by inactivating PICS. When Ag nanocubes on TiO are coated with a thin polymer layer, PICS is decelerated and the stability is improved. Replacing TiO with diamond, which does not accept electrons from plasmonic nanoparticles, is also an effective method to stabilize the nanocubes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b01457DOI Listing

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