Photochemical tuning of plasmon resonances in single gold nanoparticles
Journal article, 2008

We report on the spectrally controlled photochemical tuning of the size, shape, and localized surface plasmon resonances of individual gold nanoparticles. Single spheres, extracted from a colloidal solution, and elongated nanodiscs, fabricated by electron beam lithography, were exposed to a gold salt solution while being illuminated one by one by a focused 532-nm laser beam. The photochemical reduction of tetrachloroaureate complexes, followed by the subsequent agglomeration of gold atoms at the particle surface, lead to a well-controlled single-particle growth. This fully in situ monitored method allows us to tune the radius of single spheres as well as the aspect ratio of single ellipsoidal particles, enabling spectral control of their respective localized surface plasmon resonances.

TRANSITION

METAL

NANOPARTICLES

FLUORESCENCE

SHAPE

ENHANCED RAMAN-SCATTERING

GROWTH

NANOCRYSTALS

SIZE-CONTROLLED SYNTHESIS

PARTICLES

SPECTROSCOPY

Author

T. Hartling

Technische Universitat Dresden

Yury Alaverdyan

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

M. T. Wenzel

Technische Universitat Dresden

R. Kullock

Technische Universitat Dresden

Mikael Käll

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

L. Eng

Technische Universitat Dresden

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

1932-7447 (ISSN) 1932-7455 (eISSN)

Vol. 112 13 4920-4924

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Other Engineering and Technologies

DOI

10.1021/jp711257y

More information

Created

10/8/2017