48 results on '"Masiello DJ"'
Search Results
2. Probing the Polarization of Low-Energy Excitations in 2D Materials from Atomic Crystals to Nanophotonic Arrays Using Momentum-Resolved Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy.
- Author
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Rossi AW, Bourgeois MR, Walton C, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Spectroscopies utilizing free electron beams as probes offer detailed information on the reciprocal-space excitations of 2D materials such as graphene and transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers. Yet, despite the attention paid to such quantum materials, less consideration has been given to the electron-beam characterization of 2D periodic nanostructures such as photonic crystals, metasurfaces, and plasmon arrays, which can exhibit the same lattice and excitation symmetries as their atomic analogues albeit at drastically different length, momentum, and energy scales. Because of their lack of covalent bonding and influence of retarded electromagnetic interactions, important physical distinctions arise that complicate interpretation of scattering signals. Here we present a fully-retarded theoretical framework for describing the inelastic scattering of wide-field electron beams from 2D materials and apply it to investigate the complementarity in sample excitation information gained in the measurement of a honeycomb plasmon array versus angle-resolved optical spectroscopy in comparison to single monolayer graphene.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Spectroscopy in Nanoscopic Cavities: Models and Recent Experiments.
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Bourgeois MR, Pan F, Anyanwu CP, Nixon AG, Beutler EK, Dionne JA, Goldsmith RH, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
The ability of nanophotonic cavities to confine and store light to nanoscale dimensions has important implications for enhancing molecular, excitonic, phononic, and plasmonic optical responses. Spectroscopic signatures of processes that are ordinarily exceedingly weak such as pure absorption and Raman scattering have been brought to the single-particle limit of detection, while new emergent polaritonic states of optical matter have been realized through coupling material and photonic cavity degrees of freedom across a wide range of experimentally accessible interaction strengths. In this review, we discuss both optical and electron beam spectroscopies of cavity-coupled material systems in weak, strong, and ultrastrong coupling regimes, providing a theoretical basis for understanding the physics inherent to each while highlighting recent experimental advances and exciting future directions.
- Published
- 2024
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4. Optical polarization analogs in inelastic free-electron scattering.
- Author
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Bourgeois MR, Nixon AG, Chalifour M, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Advances in the ability to manipulate free-electron phase profiles within the electron microscope have spurred development of quantum-mechanical descriptions of electron energy loss (EEL) processes involving transitions between phase-shaped transverse states. Here, we elucidate an underlying connection between two ostensibly distinct optical polarization analogs identified in EEL experiments as manifestations of the same conserved scattering flux. Our work introduces a procedure for probing general tensorial target characteristics including global mode symmetries and local polarization.
- Published
- 2023
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5. A composite electrodynamic mechanism to reconcile spatiotemporally resolved exciton transport in quantum dot superlattices.
- Author
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Yuan R, Roberts TD, Brinn RM, Choi AA, Park HH, Yan C, Ondry JC, Khorasani S, Masiello DJ, Xu K, Alivisatos AP, and Ginsberg NS
- Abstract
Quantum dot (QD) solids are promising optoelectronic materials; further advancing their device functionality requires understanding their energy transport mechanisms. The commonly invoked near-field Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) theory often underestimates the exciton hopping rate in QD solids, yet no consensus exists on the underlying cause. In response, we use time-resolved ultrafast stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy, an ultrafast transformation of STED to spatiotemporally resolve exciton diffusion in tellurium-doped cadmium selenide-core/cadmium sulfide-shell QD superlattices. We measure the concomitant time-resolved exciton energy decay due to excitons sampling a heterogeneous energetic landscape within the superlattice. The heterogeneity is quantified by single-particle emission spectroscopy. This powerful multimodal set of observables provides sufficient constraints on a kinetic Monte Carlo simulation of exciton transport to elucidate a composite transport mechanism that includes both near-field FRET and previously neglected far-field emission/reabsorption contributions. Uncovering this mechanism offers a much-needed unified framework in which to characterize transport in QD solids and additional principles for device design.
- Published
- 2023
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6. Near-field enhancement of optical second harmonic generation in hybrid gold-lithium niobate nanostructures.
- Author
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Ali RF, Busche JA, Kamal S, Masiello DJ, and Gates BD
- Abstract
Nanophotonics research has focused recently on the ability of nonlinear optical processes to mediate and transform optical signals in a myriad of novel devices, including optical modulators, transducers, color filters, photodetectors, photon sources, and ultrafast optical switches. The inherent weakness of optical nonlinearities at smaller scales has, however, hindered the realization of efficient miniaturized devices, and strategies for enhancing both device efficiencies and synthesis throughput via nanoengineering remain limited. Here, we demonstrate a novel mechanism by which second harmonic generation, a prototypical nonlinear optical phenomenon, from individual lithium niobate particles can be significantly enhanced through nonradiative coupling to the localized surface plasmon resonances of embedded gold nanoparticles. A joint experimental and theoretical investigation of single mesoporous lithium niobate particles coated with a dispersed layer of ~10 nm diameter gold nanoparticles shows that a ~32-fold enhancement of second harmonic generation can be achieved without introducing finely tailored radiative nanoantennas to mediate photon transfer to or from the nonlinear material. This work highlights the limitations of current strategies for enhancing nonlinear optical phenomena and proposes a route through which a new class of subwavelength nonlinear optical platforms can be designed to maximize nonlinear efficiencies through near-field energy exchange., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Nonlinear effects in single-particle photothermal imaging.
- Author
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West CA, Lee SA, Shooter J, Searles EK, Goldwyn HJ, Willets KA, Link S, and Masiello DJ
- Subjects
- Gold chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry
- Abstract
Although photothermal imaging was originally designed to detect individual molecules that do not emit or small nanoparticles that do not scatter, the technique is now being applied to image and spectroscopically characterize larger and more sophisticated nanoparticle structures that scatter light strongly. Extending photothermal measurements into this regime, however, requires revisiting fundamental assumptions made in the interpretation of the signal. Herein, we present a theoretical analysis of the wavelength-resolved photothermal image and its extension to the large particle scattering regime, where we find the photothermal signal to inherit a nonlinear dependence upon pump intensity, together with a contraction of the full-width-at-half-maximum of its point spread function. We further analyze theoretically the extent to which photothermal spectra can be interpreted as an absorption spectrum measure, with deviations between the two becoming more prominent with increasing pump intensities. Companion experiments on individual 10, 20, and 100 nm radius gold nanoparticles evidence the predicted nonlinear pump power dependence and image contraction, verifying the theory and demonstrating new aspects of photothermal imaging relevant to a broader class of targets.
- Published
- 2023
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8. Active Control of Plasmonic-Photonic Interactions in a Microbubble Cavity.
- Author
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Pan F, Karlsson K, Nixon AG, Hogan LT, Ward JM, Smith KC, Masiello DJ, Nic Chormaic S, and Goldsmith RH
- Abstract
Active control of light-matter interactions using nanophotonic structures is critical for new modalities for solar energy production, cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED), and sensing, particularly at the single-particle level, where it underpins the creation of tunable nanophotonic networks. Coupled plasmonic-photonic systems show great promise toward these goals because of their subwavelength spatial confinement and ultrahigh-quality factors inherited from their respective components. Here, we present a microfluidic approach using microbubble whispering-gallery mode cavities to actively control plasmonic-photonic interactions at the single-particle level. By changing the solvent in the interior of the microbubble, control can be exerted on the interior dielectric constant and, thus, on the spatial overlap between the photonic and plasmonic modes. Qualitative agreement between experiment and simulation reveals the competing roles mode overlap and mode volume play in altering coupling strengths., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2022 American Chemical Society.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. Polarization-Resolved Electron Energy Gain Nanospectroscopy With Phase-Structured Electron Beams.
- Author
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Bourgeois MR, Nixon AG, Chalifour M, Beutler EK, and Masiello DJ
- Subjects
- Microscopy methods, Electrons, Nanostructures chemistry
- Abstract
Free-electron-based measurements in scanning transmission electron microscopes (STEMs) reveal valuable information on the broadband spectral responses of nanoscale systems with deeply subdiffraction limited spatial resolution. Leveraging recent advances in manipulating the spatial phase profile of the transverse electron wavefront, we theoretically describe interactions between the electron probe and optically stimulated nanophotonic targets in which the probe gains energy while simultaneously transitioning between transverse states with distinct phase profiles. Exploiting the selection rules governing such transitions, we propose phase-shaped electron energy gain nanospectroscopy for probing the 3D polarization-resolved response field of an optically excited target with nanoscale spatial resolution. Considering ongoing instrumental developments, polarized generalizations of STEM electron energy loss and gain measurements hold the potential to become powerful tools for fundamental studies of quantum materials and their interaction with nearby nanostructures supporting localized surface plasmon or phonon polaritons as well as for noninvasive imaging and nanoscale 3D field tomography.
- Published
- 2022
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10. Nanometer-Scale Spatial and Spectral Mapping of Exciton Polaritons in Structured Plasmonic Cavities.
- Author
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Bourgeois MR, Beutler EK, Khorasani S, Panek N, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Exciton polaritons (EPs) are ubiquitous light-matter excitations under intense investigation as test beds of fundamental physics and as components for all-optical computing. Owing to their unique attributes and facile experimental tunability, EPs potentially enable strong nonlinearities, condensation, and superfluidity at room temperature. However, the diffraction limit of light and the momentum content of fast electron probes preclude the characterization of EPs in nanoscale structured cavities exhibiting energy-momentum dispersion. Here we present fully relativistic analytical theory and companion numerical simulations showing that these limitations can be overcome to measure EPs in periodic nanophotonic cavities on their natural energy, momentum, and length scales via lattice electron energy gain spectroscopy. With the combined high momentum resolution of light and nanoscale spatial resolution of focused electron beams, lattice electron energy gain spectroscopy can expose deeply subwavelength EP features using currently available monochromated, aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopes.
- Published
- 2022
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11. Toward Quantitative Nanothermometry Using Single-Molecule Counting.
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Reinhardt PA, Crawford AP, West CA, DeLong G, Link S, Masiello DJ, and Willets KA
- Subjects
- DNA, Nanotechnology, Nucleic Acid Denaturation, Gold, Metal Nanoparticles
- Abstract
Photothermal heating of nanoparticles has applications in nanomedicine, photocatalysis, photoelectrochemistry, and data storage, but accurate measurements of temperature at the nanoparticle surface are lacking. Here we demonstrate progress toward a super-resolution DNA nanothermometry technique capable of reporting the surface temperature on single plasmonic nanoparticles. Gold nanoparticles are functionalized with double-stranded DNA, and the extent of DNA denaturation under heating conditions serves as a reporter of temperature. Fluorescently labeled DNA oligomers are used to probe the denatured DNA through transient binding interactions. By counting the number of fluorescent binding events as a function of temperature, we reconstruct DNA melting curves that reproduce trends seen for solution-phase DNA. In addition, we demonstrate our ability to control the temperature of denaturation by changing the Na
+ concentration and the base pair length of the double-stranded DNA on the nanoparticle surface. This degree of control allows us to select narrow temperature windows to probe, providing quantitative measurements of temperature at nanoscale surfaces.- Published
- 2021
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12. Imaging Infrared Plasmon Hybridization in Doped Semiconductor Nanocrystal Dimers.
- Author
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Olafsson A, Khorasani S, Busche JA, Araujo JJ, Idrobo JC, Gamelin DR, Masiello DJ, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Carrier-doped semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) offer strong plasmonic responses at frequencies beyond those accessible by conventional plasmonic nanoparticles. Like their noble metal analogues, these emerging materials can harness free space radiation and confine it to the nanoscale but at resonance frequencies that are natively infrared and spectrally tunable by carrier concentration. In this work we combine monochromated STEM-EELS and theoretical modeling to investigate the capability of colloidal indium tin oxide (ITO) NC pairs to form hybridized plasmon modes, providing an additional route to influence the IR plasmon spectrum. These results demonstrate that ITO NCs may have greater coupling strength than expected, emphasizing their potential for near-field enhancement and resonant energy transfer in the IR region.
- Published
- 2021
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13. Spectroscopy and microscopy of plasmonic systems.
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Camden JP, Masiello DJ, and Ren B
- Published
- 2021
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14. Wavelength-Dependent Photothermal Imaging Probes Nanoscale Temperature Differences among Subdiffraction Coupled Plasmonic Nanorods.
- Author
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Hosseini Jebeli SA, West CA, Lee SA, Goldwyn HJ, Bilchak CR, Fakhraai Z, Willets KA, Link S, and Masiello DJ
- Subjects
- Diagnostic Imaging, Gold, Temperature, Nanotubes, Thermometry
- Abstract
Plasmonic structures confine electromagnetic energy at the nanoscale, resulting in local, inhomogeneous, controllable heating, but reading out the temperature using optical techniques poses a difficult challenge. Here, we report on the optical thermometry of individual gold nanorod trimers that exhibit multiple wavelength-dependent plasmon modes resulting in measurably different local temperature distributions. Specifically, we demonstrate how photothermal microscopy encodes different wavelength-dependent temperature profiles in the asymmetry of the photothermal image point spread function. These asymmetries are interpreted through companion numerical simulations to reveal how thermal gradients within the trimer can be controlled by exciting its hybridized plasmon modes. We also find that plasmon modes that are optically dark can be excited by focused laser beam illumination, providing another route to modify thermal profiles beyond wide-field illumination. Taken together these findings demonstrate an all-optical thermometry technique to actively create and measure nanoscale thermal gradients below the diffraction limit.
- Published
- 2021
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15. Correction to "Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonding Tunes Vibronic Coupling in Heptazine Complexes".
- Author
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Rabe EJ, Goldwyn HJ, Hwang D, Masiello DJ, and Schlenker CW
- Published
- 2021
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16. High spatial and energy resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy of the magnetic and electric excitations in plasmonic nanorod oligomers.
- Author
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Pakeltis G, Rotunno E, Khorassani S, Garfinkel DA, Collette R, West CA, Retterer ST, Idrobo JC, Masiello DJ, and Rack PD
- Abstract
We leverage the high spatial and energy resolution of monochromated aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy to study the hybridization of cyclic assemblies of plasmonic gold nanorods. Detailed experiments and simulations elucidate the hybridization of the coupled long-axis dipole modes into collective magnetic and electric dipole plasmon resonances. We resolve the magnetic dipole mode in these closed loop oligomers with electron energy loss spectroscopy and confirm the mode assignment with its characteristic spectrum image. The energy splitting of the magnetic mode and antibonding modes increases with the number of polygon edges (n). For the n=3-6 oligomers studied, optical simulations using normal incidence and s-polarized oblique incidence show the respective electric and magnetic modes' extinction efficiencies are maximized in the n=4 arrangement.
- Published
- 2021
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17. Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonding Tunes Vibronic Coupling in Heptazine Complexes.
- Author
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Rabe EJ, Goldwyn HJ, Hwang D, Masiello DJ, and Schlenker CW
- Abstract
To better understand how hydrogen bonding influences the excited-state landscapes of aza-aromatic materials, we studied hydrogen-bonded complexes of 2,5,8-tris (4-methoxyphenyl)-1,3,4,6,7,9,9b-heptaazaphenalene (TAHz), a molecular photocatalyst related to graphitic carbon nitride, with a variety of phenol derivatives (R-PhOH). By varying the electron-withdrawing character of the para-substituent on the phenol, we can modulate the strength of the hydrogen bond. Using time-resolved photoluminescence, we extract a spectral component associated with the R-PhOH-TAHz hydrogen-bonded complex. Surprisingly, we noticed a striking change in the relative amplitude of vibronic peaks in the TAHz-centered emission as a function of R-group on phenol. To gain a physical understanding of these spectral changes, we employed a displaced-oscillator model of molecular emission to fit these spectra. This fit assumes that two vibrational modes are dominantly coupled to the emissive electronic transition and extracts their frequencies and relative nuclear displacements (related to the Huang-Rhys factor). With the aid of quantum chemical calculations, we found that heptazine ring-breathing and ring-puckering modes are likely responsible for the observed vibronic progression, and both modes indicate decreasing molecular distortion in the excited state with increasing hydrogen bond strength. This finding offers new insights into intermolecular excited-state hydrogen bonding, which is a crucial step toward controlling excited-state proton-coupled electron transfer and proton transfer reactions.
- Published
- 2020
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18. Electron Beam Infrared Nano-Ellipsometry of Individual Indium Tin Oxide Nanocrystals.
- Author
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Olafsson A, Busche JA, Araujo JJ, Maiti A, Idrobo JC, Gamelin DR, Masiello DJ, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Leveraging recent advances in electron energy monochromation and aberration correction, we record the spatially resolved infrared plasmon spectrum of individual tin-doped indium oxide nanocrystals using electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS). Both surface and bulk plasmon responses are measured as a function of tin doping concentration from 1-10 atomic percent. These results are compared to theoretical models, which elucidate the spectral detuning of the same surface plasmon resonance feature when measured from aloof and penetrating probe geometries. We additionally demonstrate a unique approach to retrieving the fundamental dielectric parameters of individual semiconductor nanocrystals via EELS. This method, devoid from ensemble averaging, illustrates the potential for electron-beam ellipsometry measurements on materials that cannot be prepared in bulk form or as thin films.
- Published
- 2020
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19. The COVID-19 Pandemic: A View from New York City.
- Author
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Masiello DJ
- Subjects
- COVID-19, Humans, New York City, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Treatment Outcome, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections drug therapy, Homeopathy methods, Materia Medica therapeutic use, Pneumonia, Viral drug therapy
- Abstract
This article provides a view of homeopathic clinical practice in the New York City area in the first few months of 2020 as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic began to evolve in the United States. Key symptoms used to generate a short list of potentially curative remedies are given, and the pandemic syndrome is viewed as appearing in stages or as having various clinical manifestations each with its own main remedy. The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is briefly described, as are the preliminary presenting signs and symptoms of COVID-19 infection. Several clinical examples are given, some with positive laboratory confirmation., Competing Interests: None declared., (The Faculty of Homeopathy.)
- Published
- 2020
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20. Near field excited state imaging via stimulated electron energy gain spectroscopy of localized surface plasmon resonances in plasmonic nanorod antennas.
- Author
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Collette R, Garfinkel DA, Hu Z, Masiello DJ, and Rack PD
- Abstract
Continuous wave (cw) photon stimulated electron energy loss and gain spectroscopy (sEELS and sEEGS) is used to image the near field of optically stimulated localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) modes in nanorod antennas. An optical delivery system equipped with a nanomanipulator and a fiber-coupled laser diode is used to simultaneously irradiate plasmonic nanostructures in a (scanning) transmission electron microscope. The nanorod length is varied such that the m = 1, 2, and 3 LSPR modes are resonant with the laser energy and the optically stimulated near field spectra and images of these modes are measured. Various nanorod orientations are also investigated to explore retardation effects. Optical and electron beam simulations are used to rationalize the observed patterns. As expected, the odd modes are optically bright and result in observed sEEG responses. The m = 2 dark mode does not produce a sEEG response, however, when tilted such that retardation effects are operative, the sEEG signal emerges. Thus, we demonstrate that cw sEEGS is an effective tool in imaging the near field of the full set of nanorod plasmon modes of either parity.
- Published
- 2020
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21. Far-field midinfrared superresolution imaging and spectroscopy of single high aspect ratio gold nanowires.
- Author
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Aleshire K, Pavlovetc IM, Collette R, Kong XT, Rack PD, Zhang S, Masiello DJ, Camden JP, Hartland GV, and Kuno M
- Abstract
Limited approaches exist for imaging and recording spectra of individual nanostructures in the midinfrared region. Here we use infrared photothermal heterodyne imaging (IR-PHI) to interrogate single, high aspect ratio Au nanowires (NWs). Spectra recorded between 2,800 and 4,000 cm
-1 for 2.5-3.9-μm-long NWs reveal a series of resonances due to the Fabry-Pérot modes of the NWs. Crucially, IR-PHI images show structure that reflects the spatial distribution of the NW absorption, and allow the resonances to be assigned to the m = 3 and m = 4 Fabry-Pérot modes. This far-field optical measurement has been used to image the mode structure of plasmon resonances in metal nanostructures, and is made possible by the superresolution capabilities of IR-PHI. The linewidths in the NW spectra range from 35 to 75 meV and, in several cases, are significantly below the limiting values predicted by the bulk Au Drude damping parameter. These linewidths imply long dephasing times, and are attributed to reduction in both radiation damping and resistive heating effects in the NWs. Compared to previous imaging studies of NW Fabry-Pérot modes using electron microscopy or near-field optical scanning techniques, IR-PHI experiments are performed under ambient conditions, enabling detailed studies of how the environment affects mid-IR plasmons., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interest.- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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22. Elucidating Energy Pathways through Simultaneous Measurement of Absorption and Transmission in a Coupled Plasmonic-Photonic Cavity.
- Author
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Pan F, Smith KC, Nguyen HL, Knapper KA, Masiello DJ, and Goldsmith RH
- Abstract
Control of light-matter interactions is central to numerous advances in quantum communication, information, and sensing. The relative ease with which interactions can be tailored in coupled plasmonic-photonic systems makes them ideal candidates for investigation. To exert control over the interaction between photons and plasmons, it is essential to identify the underlying energy pathways which influence the system's dynamics and determine the critical system parameters, such as the coupling strength and dissipation rates. However, in coupled systems which dissipate energy through multiple competing pathways, simultaneously resolving all parameters from a single experiment is challenging as typical observables such as absorption and scattering each probe only a particular path. In this work, we simultaneously measure both photothermal absorption and two-sided optical transmission in a coupled plasmonic-photonic resonator consisting of plasmonic gold nanorods deposited on a toroidal whispering-gallery-mode optical microresonator. We then present an analytical model which predicts and explains the distinct line shapes observed and quantifies the contribution of each system parameter. By combining this model with experiment, we extract all system parameters with a dynamic range spanning 9 orders of magnitude. Our combined approach provides a full description of plasmonic-photonic energy dynamics in a weakly coupled optical system, a necessary step for future applications that rely on tunability of dissipation and coupling.
- Published
- 2020
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23. Direct Observation of Infrared Plasmonic Fano Antiresonances by a Nanoscale Electron Probe.
- Author
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Smith KC, Olafsson A, Hu X, Quillin SC, Idrobo JC, Collette R, Rack PD, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
In this Letter, we exploit recent breakthroughs in monochromated aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) to resolve infrared plasmonic Fano antiresonances in individual nanofabricated disk-rod dimers. Using a combination of electron energy-loss spectroscopy and theoretical modeling, we investigate and characterize a subspace of the weak coupling regime between quasidiscrete and quasicontinuum localized surface plasmon resonances where infrared plasmonic Fano antiresonances appear. This work illustrates the capability of STEM instrumentation to experimentally observe nanoscale plasmonic responses that were previously the domain only of higher-resolution infrared spectroscopies.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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24. Rotation of Single-Molecule Emission Polarization by Plasmonic Nanorods.
- Author
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Zuo T, Goldwyn HJ, Isaacoff BP, Masiello DJ, and Biteen JS
- Subjects
- Carbocyanines chemistry, Microscopy, Polarization, Nanotubes chemistry
- Abstract
The strong light-matter interactions between dyes and plasmonic nanoantennas enable the study of fundamental molecular-optical processes. Here, we overcome conventional limitations with high-throughput single-molecule polarization-resolved microscopy to measure dye emission polarization modifications upon near-field coupling to a gold nanorod. We determine that the emission polarization distribution is not only rotated toward the nanorod's dominant localized surface plasmon mode as expected, but it is also unintuitively broadened. With a reduced-order analytical model, we elucidate how this distribution broadening depends upon both far-field interference and off-resonant coupling between the molecular dipole and the nanorod transverse plasmon mode. Experiments and modeling reveal that a nearby plasmonic nanoantenna affects dye emission polarization through a multicolor process, even when the orthogonal plasmon modes are separated by approximately 3 times the dye emission line width. Beyond advancing our understanding of plasmon-coupled emission modifications, this work promises to improve high-sensitivity single-molecule fluorescence imaging, biosensing, and spectral engineering.
- Published
- 2019
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25. Active Far-Field Control of the Thermal Near-Field via Plasmon Hybridization.
- Author
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Bhattacharjee U, West CA, Hosseini Jebeli SA, Goldwyn HJ, Kong XT, Hu Z, Beutler EK, Chang WS, Willets KA, Link S, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
The ability to control and manipulate temperature at nanoscale dimensions has the potential to impact applications including heat-assisted magnetic recording, photothermal therapies, and temperature-driven reactivity. One challenge with controlling temperature at nanometer dimensions is the need to mitigate heat diffusion, such that the temperature only changes in well-defined nanoscopic regions of the sample. Here we demonstrate the ability to use far-field laser excitation to actively shape the thermal near-field in individual gold nanorod heterodimers by resonantly pumping either the in-phase or out-of-phase hybridized dipole plasmon modes. Using single-particle photothermal heterodyne imaging, we demonstrate localization bias in the photothermal intensity due to preferential heating of one of the nanorods within the pair. Theoretical modeling and numerical simulation make explicit how the resulting photothermal images encode wavelength-dependent temperature biases between each nanorod within a heterodimer, demonstrating the ability to actively manage the thermal near-field by simply tuning the color of incident light.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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26. Tribute to William P. Reinhardt.
- Author
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Martens CC and Masiello DJ
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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27. Plasmon Heating Promotes Ligand Reorganization on Single Gold Nanorods.
- Author
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Cheng X, Anthony TP, West CA, Hu Z, Sundaresan V, McLeod AJ, Masiello DJ, and Willets KA
- Abstract
Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy is used to follow dynamic ligand reorganization on the surface of single plasmonic gold nanorods. Fluorescently labeled DNA is attached to gold nanorods via a gold-thiol bond using a low-pH loading method. No fluorescence activity is initially observed from the fluorescent labels on the nanorod surface, which we attribute to a collapsed geometry of DNA on the metal. Upon several minutes of laser illumination, a marked increase in fluorescence activity is observed, suggesting that the ligand shell reorganizes from a collapsed, quenched geometry to an upright, ordered geometry. The ligand reorganization is facilitated by plasmon-mediated photothermal heating, as verified by controls using an external heat source and simulated by coupled optical and heat diffusion modeling. Using super-resolution image reconstruction, we observe spatial variations in which ligand reorganization occurs at the single-particle level. The results suggest the possibility of nonuniform plasmonic heating, which would be hidden with traditional ensemble-averaged measurements.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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28. Symmetry-Broken Many-Body Excited States of the Gaseous Atomic Double-Well Bose-Einstein Condensate.
- Author
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Masiello DJ and Reinhardt WP
- Abstract
Macroscopic, many-body self-trapped and quantum superposition states of the gaseous double-well Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) are investigated within the context of a multiconfigurational bosonic self-consistent field theory based upon underlying spatially symmetry-broken one-body wave functions. To aid in the interpretation of our results, an approximate model is constructed in the extreme Fock state limit, in which self-trapped and superposition states emerge in the many-body spectrum, striking a delicate balance between the degree of symmetry breaking, the effects of the condensate's mean field, and that of atomic correlation. It is found, in both the model and full theory, that the superposition state lies energetically below its related self-trapped counterpart even when many configurations are involved. Noticeably different spatial density profiles are associated with each type of excited state, thus providing a rigorous justification for approximate descriptions of high-lying excited states of the BEC.
- Published
- 2019
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29. Introduction: Plasmonics in Chemistry.
- Author
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Link S and Masiello DJ
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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30. Multipolar Nanocube Plasmon Mode-Mixing in Finite Substrates.
- Author
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Cherqui C, Li G, Busche JA, Quillin SC, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Facile control of the radiative and nonradiative properties of plasmonic nanostructures is of practical importance to a wide range of applications in the biological, chemical, optical, information, and energy sciences. For example, the ability to easily tune not only the plasmon spectrum but also the degree of coupling to light and/or heat, quality factor, and optical mode volume would aid the performance and function of nanophotonic devices and molecular sensors that rely upon plasmonic elements to confine and manipulate light at nanoscopic dimensions. While many routes exist to tune these properties, identifying new approaches-especially when they are simple to apply experimentally-is an important task. Here, we demonstrate the significant and underappreciated effects that substrate thickness and dielectric composition can have upon plasmon hybridization as well as downstream properties that depend upon this hybridization. We find that even substrates as thin as ∼10 nm can nontrivially mix free-space plasmon modes, imparting bright character to those that are dark (and vice versa) and, thereby, modifying the plasmonic density of states as well as the system's near- and far-field optical properties. A combination of electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) experiment, numerical simulation, and analytical modeling is used to elucidate this behavior in the finite substrate-induced mixing of dipole, quadrupole, and octupole corner-localized plasmon resonances of individual silver nanocubes.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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31. Sculpting Fano Resonances To Control Photonic-Plasmonic Hybridization.
- Author
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Thakkar N, Rea MT, Smith KC, Heylman KD, Quillin SC, Knapper KA, Horak EH, Masiello DJ, and Goldsmith RH
- Abstract
Hybrid photonic-plasmonic systems have tremendous potential as versatile platforms for the study and control of nanoscale light-matter interactions since their respective components have either high-quality factors or low mode volumes. Individual metallic nanoparticles deposited on optical microresonators provide an excellent example where ultrahigh-quality optical whispering-gallery modes can be combined with nanoscopic plasmonic mode volumes to maximize the system's photonic performance. Such optimization, however, is difficult in practice because of the inability to easily measure and tune critical system parameters. In this Letter, we present a general and practical method to determine the coupling strength and tailor the degree of hybridization in composite optical microresonator-plasmonic nanoparticle systems based on experimentally measured absorption spectra. Specifically, we use thermal annealing to control the detuning between a metal nanoparticle's localized surface plasmon resonance and the whispering-gallery modes of an optical microresonator cavity. We demonstrate the ability to sculpt Fano resonance lineshapes in the absorption spectrum and infer system parameters critical to elucidating the underlying photonic-plasmonic hybridization. We show that including decoherence processes is necessary to capture the evolution of the lineshapes. As a result, thermal annealing allows us to directly tune the degree of hybridization and various hybrid mode quantities such as the quality factor and mode volume and ultimately maximize the Purcell factor to be 10
4 .- Published
- 2017
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32. Noninvasive Cathodoluminescence-Activated Nanoimaging of Dynamic Processes in Liquids.
- Author
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Bischak CG, Wai RB, Cherqui C, Busche JA, Quillin SC, Hetherington CL, Wang Z, Aiello CD, Schlom DG, Aloni S, Ogletree DF, Masiello DJ, and Ginsberg NS
- Abstract
In situ electron microscopy provides remarkably high spatial resolution, yet electron beam irradiation often damages soft materials and perturbs dynamic processes, requiring samples to be very robust. Here, we instead noninvasively image the dynamics of metal and polymer nanoparticles in a liquid environment with subdiffraction resolution using cathodoluminescence-activated imaging by resonant energy transfer (CLAIRE). In CLAIRE, a free-standing scintillator film serves as a nanoscale optical excitation source when excited by a low energy, focused electron beam. We capture the nanoscale dynamics of these particles translating along and desorbing from the scintillator surface and demonstrate 50 ms frame acquisition and a range of imaging of at least 20 nm from the scintillator surface. Furthermore, in contrast with in situ electron microscopy, CLAIRE provides spectral selectivity instead of relying on scattering alone. We also demonstrate through quantitative modeling that the CLAIRE signal from metal nanoparticles is impacted by multiplasmonic mode interferences. Our findings demonstrate that CLAIRE is a promising, noninvasive approach for super-resolution imaging for soft and fluid materials with high spatial and temporal resolution.
- Published
- 2017
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33. Dynamic Optical Switching of Polymer/Plasmonic Nanoparticle Hybrids with Sparse Loading.
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Qian Z, Guye KN, Masiello DJ, and Ginger DS
- Abstract
Responsive nanomaterials composed of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and temperature-responsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) hydrogels offer the promise of designing smart materials that can change color in response to varying thermal or photothermal stimuli. Typical PNIPAM/AuNP hybrids are heavily loaded with AuNPs. Here, we demonstrate that hybrids with an average loading of three to five AuNPs per PNIPAM sphere exhibit peak extinction shifts of over 150 nm and color change from red to purple to gray as the temperature increases from 25 to 50 °C. We observe that the time scale for spectral shifts is offset from that for hydrophobic collapse of the PNIPAM spheres. Facilitated by the low loading density, we combine kinetic studies of the changes in the extinction spectra with finite-difference time-domain simulations to show that the location of AuNPs relative to the PNIPAM sphere at different stages of collapse is a key variable accounting for the time and temperature dependence of the experimental data.
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- 2017
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34. STEM/EELS Imaging of Magnetic Hybridization in Symmetric and Symmetry-Broken Plasmon Oligomer Dimers and All-Magnetic Fano Interference.
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Cherqui C, Wu Y, Li G, Quillin SC, Busche JA, Thakkar N, West CA, Montoni NP, Rack PD, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Negative-index metamaterials composed of magnetic plasmon oligomers are actively being investigated for their potential role in optical cloaking, superlensing, and nanolithography applications. A significant improvement to their practicality lies in the ability to function at multiple distinct wavelengths in the visible part of spectrum. Here we utilize the nanometer spatial-resolving power of electron energy-loss spectroscopy to conclusively demonstrate hybridization of magnetic plasmons in oligomer dimers that can achieve this goal. We also show that breaking the dimer's symmetry can induce all-magnetic Fano interferences based solely on the interplay of bright and dark magnetic modes, allowing us to further tailor the system's optical responses. These features are engineered through the design of the oligomer's underlying nanoparticle elements as elongated Ag nanodisks with spectrally isolated long-axis plasmon resonances. The resulting magnetic plasmon oligomers and their hybridized assemblies establish a new design paradigm for optical metamaterials with rich functionality.
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- 2016
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35. Imaging Energy Transfer in Pt-Decorated Au Nanoprisms via Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.
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Griffin S, Montoni NP, Li G, Straney PJ, Millstone JE, Masiello DJ, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Driven by the desire to understand energy transfer between plasmonic and catalytic metals for applications such as plasmon-mediated catalysis, we examine the spatially resolved electron energy-loss spectra (EELS) of both pure Au nanoprisms and Pt-decorated Au nanoprisms. The EEL spectra and the resulting surface-plasmon mode maps reveal detailed near-field information on the coupling and energy transfer in these systems, thereby elucidating the underlying mechanism of plasmon-driven chemical catalysis in mixed-metal nanostructures. Through a combination of experiment and theory we demonstrate that although the location of the Pt decoration greatly influences the plasmons of the nanoprism, simple spatial proximity is not enough to induce significant energy transfer from the Au to the Pt. What matters more is the spectral overlap between the intrinsic plasmon resonances of the Au nanoprism and Pt decoration, which can be tuned by changing the composition or morphology of either component.
- Published
- 2016
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36. Characterizing Localized Surface Plasmons Using Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.
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Cherqui C, Thakkar N, Li G, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) offers a window to view nanoscale properties and processes. When performed in a scanning transmission electron microscope, EELS can simultaneously render images of nanoscale objects with subnanometer spatial resolution and correlate them with spectroscopic information at a spectral resolution of ∼10-100 meV. Consequently, EELS is a near-perfect tool for understanding the optical and electronic properties of individual plasmonic metal nanoparticles and few-nanoparticle assemblies, which are significant in a wide range of fields. This review presents an overview of basic plasmonics and EELS theory and highlights several recent noteworthy experiments involving the interrogation of plasmonic metal nanoparticle systems using electron beams.
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- 2016
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37. Examining Substrate-Induced Plasmon Mode Splitting and Localization in Truncated Silver Nanospheres with Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy.
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Li G, Cherqui C, Wu Y, Bigelow NW, Simmons PD, Rack PD, Masiello DJ, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Motivated by the need to study the size dependence of nanoparticle-substrate systems, we present a combined experimental and theoretical electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) study of the plasmonic spectrum of substrate-supported truncated silver nanospheres. This work spans the entire classical range of plasmonic behavior probing particles of 20-1000 nm in diameter, allowing us to map the evolution of localized surface plasmons into surface plasmon polaritons and study the size dependence of substrate-induced mode splitting. This work constitutes the first nanoscopic characterization and imaging of these effects in truncated nanospheres, setting the stage for the systematic study of plasmon-mediated energy transfer in nanoparticle-substrate systems.
- Published
- 2015
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38. Spatially Mapping Energy Transfer from Single Plasmonic Particles to Semiconductor Substrates via STEM/EELS.
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Li G, Cherqui C, Bigelow NW, Duscher G, Straney PJ, Millstone JE, Masiello DJ, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Energy transfer from plasmonic nanoparticles to semiconductors can expand the available spectrum of solar energy-harvesting devices. Here, we spatially and spectrally resolve the interaction between single Ag nanocubes with insulating and semiconducting substrates using electron energy-loss spectroscopy, electrodynamics simulations, and extended plasmon hybridization theory. Our results illustrate a new way to characterize plasmon-semiconductor energy transfer at the nanoscale and bear impact upon the design of next-generation solar energy-harvesting devices.
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- 2015
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39. Thermal Signatures of Plasmonic Fano Interferences: Toward the Achievement of Nanolocalized Temperature Manipulation.
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Baldwin CL, Bigelow NW, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
A consequence of thermal diffusion is that heat, even when applied to a localized region of space, has the tendency to produce a temperature change that is spatially uniform throughout a material with a thermal conductivity that is much larger than that of its environment. This implies that the degree of spatial correlation between the heat power supplied and the temperature change that it induces is likely to be small. Here, we show, via theory and simulation, that through a Fano interference, temperature changes can be both localized and controllably directed within certain plasmon-supporting metal nanoparticle assemblies. This occurs even when all particles are composed of the same material and contained within the same diffraction-limited spot. These anomalous thermal properties are compared and contrasted across three different nanosystems, the coupled nanorod-antenna, the heterorod dimer, and the nanocube on a substrate, known to support both spatial and spectral Fano interferences. We conclude that the presence of a Fano resonance is not sufficient by itself to induce a controllably nanolocalized temperature change. However, when present in a nanosystem of the right composition and morphology, temperature changes can be manipulated with nanoscale precision, despite thermal diffusion.
- Published
- 2014
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40. Charge-tunable quantum plasmons in colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals.
- Author
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Schimpf AM, Thakkar N, Gunthardt CE, Masiello DJ, and Gamelin DR
- Abstract
Nanomaterials exhibiting plasmonic optical responses are impacting sensing, information processing, catalysis, solar, and photonics technologies. Recent advances have expanded the portfolio of plasmonic nanostructures into doped semiconductor nanocrystals, which allow dynamic manipulation of carrier densities. Once interpreted as intraband single-electron transitions, the infrared absorption of doped semiconductor nanocrystals is now commonly attributed to localized surface plasmon resonances and analyzed using the classical Drude model to determine carrier densities. Here, we show that the experimental plasmon resonance energies of photodoped ZnO nanocrystals with controlled sizes and carrier densities diverge from classical Drude model predictions at small sizes, revealing quantum plasmons in these nanocrystals. A Lorentz oscillator model more adequately describes the data and illustrates a closer link between plasmon resonances and single-electron transitions in semiconductors than in metals, highlighting a fundamental contrast between these two classes of plasmonic materials.
- Published
- 2014
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41. Signatures of Fano interferences in the electron energy loss spectroscopy and cathodoluminescence of symmetry-broken nanorod dimers.
- Author
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Bigelow NW, Vaschillo A, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Abstract
Through numerical simulation, we predict the existence of the Fano interference effect in the electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and cathodoluminescence (CL) of symmetry-broken nanorod dimers that are heterogeneous in material composition and asymmetric in length. The differing selection rules of the electron probe in comparison to the photon of a plane wave allow for the simultaneous excitation of both optically bright and dark plasmons of each monomer unit, suggesting that Fano resonances will not arise in EELS and CL. Yet, interferences are manifested in the dimer's scattered near- and far-fields and are evident in EELS and CL due to the rapid π-phase offset in the polarizations between super-radiant and subradiant hybridized plasmon modes of the dimer as a function of the energy loss suffered by the impinging electron. Depending upon the location of the electron beam, we demonstrate the conditions under which Fano interferences will be present in both optical and electron spectroscopies (EELS and CL) as well as a new class of Fano interferences that are uniquely electron-driven and are absent in the optical response. Among other things, the knowledge gained from this work bears impact upon the design of some of the world's most sensitive sensors, which are currently based upon Fano resonances.
- Published
- 2013
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42. Characterization of the electron- and photon-driven plasmonic excitations of metal nanorods.
- Author
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Bigelow NW, Vaschillo A, Iberi V, Camden JP, and Masiello DJ
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Electrons, Light, Photons, Scattering, Radiation, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles ultrastructure, Models, Chemical, Models, Molecular, Surface Plasmon Resonance methods
- Abstract
A computational analysis of the electron- and photon-driven surface-plasmon resonances of monomer and dimer metal nanorods is presented to elucidate the differences and similarities between the two excitation mechanisms in a system with well-understood optical properties. By correlating the nanostructure's simulated electron energy-loss spectrum and loss-probability maps with its induced polarization and scattered electric field we discern how certain plasmon modes are selectively excited and how they funnel energy from the excitation source into the near- and far-field. Using a fully retarded electron-scattering theory capable of describing arbitrary three-dimensional nanoparticle geometries, aggregation schemes, and material compositions, we find that electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) is able to indirectly probe the same electromagnetic hot spots that are generated by an optical excitation source. Comparison with recent experiment is made to verify our findings.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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43. Single-Molecule Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering: Can STEM/EELS Image Electromagnetic Hot Spots?
- Author
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Mirsaleh-Kohan N, Iberi V, Simmons PD Jr, Bigelow NW, Vaschillo A, Rowland MM, Best MD, Pennycook SJ, Masiello DJ, Guiton BS, and Camden JP
- Abstract
Since the observation of single-molecule surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SMSERS) in 1997, questions regarding the nature of the electromagnetic hot spots responsible for such observations still persist. For the first time, we employ electron-energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) to obtain maps of the localized surface plasmon modes of SMSERS-active nanostructures, which are resolved in both space and energy. Single-molecule character is confirmed by the bianalyte approach using two isotopologues of Rhodamine 6G. Surprisingly, the STEM/EELS plasmon maps do not show any direct signature of an electromagnetic hot spot in the gaps between the nanoparticles. The origins of this observation are explored using a fully three-dimensional electrodynamics simulation of both the electron-energy-loss probability and the near-electric field enhancements. The calculations suggest that electron beam excitation of the hot spot is possible, but only when the electron beam is located outside of the junction region.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Super-resolution imaging reveals a difference between SERS and luminescence centroids.
- Author
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Weber ML, Litz JP, Masiello DJ, and Willets KA
- Subjects
- Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Rhodamines chemistry, Silver chemistry, Sodium Chloride chemistry, Surface Properties, Luminescent Measurements, Spectrum Analysis, Raman
- Abstract
Super-resolution optical imaging of Rhodamine 6G surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and silver luminescence from colloidal silver aggregates are measured with sub-5 nm resolution and found to originate from distinct spatial locations on the nanoparticle surface. Using correlated scanning electron microscopy, the spatial origins of the two signals are mapped onto the nanoparticle structure, revealing that, while both types of emission are plasmon-mediated, SERS is a highly local effect, probing only a single junction in a nanoparticle aggregate, whereas luminescence probes all collective plasmon modes within the nanostructure. Calculations using the discrete-dipole approximation to calculate the weighted centroid position of both the |E|(2)/|E(inc)|(2) and |E|(4)/|E(inc)|(4) electromagnetic fields were compared to the super-resolution centroid positions of the SERS and luminescence data and found to agree with the proposed plasmon dependence of the two emission signals. These results are significant to the field of SERS because they allow us to assign the exact nanoparticle junction responsible for single-molecule SERS emission in higher order aggregates and also provide insight into how SERS is coupled into the plasmon modes of the underlying nanostructure, which is important for developing new theoretical models to describe SERS emission.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Submicrosecond time resolution atomic force microscopy for probing nanoscale dynamics.
- Author
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Giridharagopal R, Rayermann GE, Shao G, Moore DT, Reid OG, Tillack AF, Masiello DJ, and Ginger DS
- Subjects
- Microscopy, Atomic Force, Particle Size, Time Factors, Nanostructures chemistry, Thermodynamics
- Abstract
We propose, simulate, and experimentally validate a new mechanical detection method to analyze atomic force microscopy (AFM) cantilever motion that enables noncontact discrimination of transient events with ~100 ns temporal resolution without the need for custom AFM probes, specialized instrumentation, or expensive add-on hardware. As an example application, we use the method to screen thermally annealed poly(3-hexylthiophene):phenyl-C(61)-butyric acid methyl ester photovoltaic devices under realistic testing conditions over a technologically relevant performance window. We show that variations in device efficiency and nanoscale transient charging behavior are correlated, thereby linking local dynamics with device behavior. We anticipate that this method will find application in scanning probe experiments of dynamic local mechanical, electronic, magnetic, and biophysical phenomena., (© 2012 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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46. On the linear response and scattering of an interacting molecule-metal system.
- Author
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Masiello DJ and Schatz GC
- Abstract
A many-body Green's function approach to the microscopic theory of plasmon-enhanced spectroscopy is presented within the context of localized surface-plasmon resonance spectroscopy and applied to investigate the coupling between quantum-molecular and classical-plasmonic resonances in monolayer-coated silver nanoparticles. Electronic propagators or Green's functions, accounting for the repeated polarization interaction between a single molecule and its image in a nearby nanoscale metal, are explicitly computed and used to construct the linear-response properties of the combined molecule-metal system to an external electromagnetic perturbation. Shifting and finite lifetime of states appear rigorously and automatically within our approach and reveal an intricate coupling between molecule and metal not fully described by previous theories. Self-consistent incorporation of this quantum-molecular response into the continuum-electromagnetic scattering of the molecule-metal target is exploited to compute the localized surface-plasmon resonance wavelength shift with respect to the bare metal from first principles.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Surface-enhanced Raman excitation spectroscopy of a single rhodamine 6G molecule.
- Author
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Dieringer JA, Wustholz KL, Masiello DJ, Camden JP, Kleinman SL, Schatz GC, and Van Duyne RP
- Abstract
The surface-enhanced Raman excitation profiles (REPs) of rhodamine 6G (R6G) on Ag surfaces are studied using a tunable optical parametric oscillator excitation source and versatile detection scheme. These experiments afford the ability to finely tune the excitation wavelength near the molecular resonance of R6G (i.e., approximately 500-575 nm) and perform wavelength-scanned surface-enhanced Raman excitation measurements of a single molecule. The ensemble-averaged surface-enhanced REPs are measured for collections of molecules on Ag island films. The relative contributions of the 0-0 and 0-1 vibronic transitions to the surface-enhanced REPs vary with vibrational frequency. These results highlight the role of excitation energy in determining the resonance Raman intensities for R6G on surface-enhancing nanostructures. Single-molecule measurements are obtained from individual molecules of R6G on Ag colloidal aggregates, where single-molecule junctions are located using the isotope-edited approach. Overall, single-molecule surface-enhanced REPs are narrow in comparison to the ensemble-averaged excitation profiles due to a reduction in inhomogeneous broadening. This work describes the first Raman excitation spectroscopy studies of a single molecule, revealing new information previously obscured by the ensemble.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Probing the structure of single-molecule surface-enhanced Raman scattering hot spots.
- Author
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Camden JP, Dieringer JA, Wang Y, Masiello DJ, Marks LD, Schatz GC, and Van Duyne RP
- Abstract
We present here a detailed study of the specific nanoparticle structures that give rise to single-molecule surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SMSERS). A variety of structures are observed, but the simplest are dimers of Ag nanocrystals. We chose one of these structures for detailed study using electrodynamics calculations and found that the electromagnetic SERS enhancement factors of 10(9) are easily obtained and are consistent with single-molecule SERS activity.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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