Engineering efficient self-assembled plasmonic nanostructures by configuring metallic nanoparticle’s morphology

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Abstract

We reveal the significance of plasmonic nanoparticle’s (NP) shape and its surface morphology en route to an efficient self-assembled plasmonic nanoparticle cluster. A simplified model is simulated in the form of free-space dimer and trimer nanostructures (NPs in the shape of a sphere, cube, and disk). A ~200% to ~125% rise in near-field strength (gap mode enhancement) is observed for spherical NPs in comparison with cubical NPs (from 2 nm to 8 nm gap sizes). Full-width threequarter maximum reveals better broad-spectral optical performance in a range of ~100 nm (dimer) and ~170 nm (trimer) from spherical NPs as compared to a cube (~60 nm for dimer and trimer). These excellent properties for sphere-based nanostructures are merited from its dipole mode characteristics.

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Devaraj, V., Lee, J. M., Kim, Y. J., Jeong, H., & Oh, J. W. (2021). Engineering efficient self-assembled plasmonic nanostructures by configuring metallic nanoparticle’s morphology. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms221910595

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