• Stacked and Tunable Large-Scale Plasmonic Nanoparticle Arrays for Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy
    S. Mühlig, D. Cialla, A. Cunningham, A. März, K. Weber, T. Bürgi, F. Lederer and C. Rockstuhl
    The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 118 (19) (2014), p10230-10237
    DOI:10.1021/jp409688p | unige:94111 | Abstract | Article HTML | Article PDF
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy takes advantage of plasmonic substrates that sustain resonances at tunable frequencies with a reproducibly extraordinary field enhancement. Low-cost and large-scale fabrication of these substrates is further required. Here, we present stacked large-scale arrays of strongly coupled gold nanoparticles as promising candidates for such substrates. These arrays are fabricated by bottom-up techniques that fulfill the aforementioned requirements. The distance between adjacent arrays in the stack is controlled with high precision using a discrete number of monolayers of molecules that enable the spectral position of the plasmonic resonances to be tuned. Although the nanoparticles are randomly arranged in each array, the spatial proximity of the stacked arrays enables a strong coupling among nanoparticles to be achieved in adjacent arrays. The huge field enhancements due to these strongly coupled gold nanoparticles are shown to enhance the Raman signal. We show that effectively the optical response from these stacked arrays and the Raman signals can be understood in a simplifying picture where only an individual nanoparticle dimer is considered. The possibility to tune the plasmonic resonances of the substrate across the visible spectrum makes our material a plasmonic substrate of choice for many applications where light–matter interactions need to be intensified.

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