| Literature DB >> 24059599 |
Jan Mertens1, Anna L Eiden, Daniel O Sigle, Fumin Huang, Antonio Lombardo, Zhipei Sun, Ravi S Sundaram, Alan Colli, Christos Tserkezis, Javier Aizpurua, Silvia Milana, Andrea C Ferrari, Jeremy J Baumberg.
Abstract
Graphene is used as the thinnest possible spacer between gold nanoparticles and a gold substrate. This creates a robust, repeatable, and stable subnanometer gap for massive plasmonic field enhancements. White light spectroscopy of single 80 nm gold nanoparticles reveals plasmonic coupling between the particle and its image within the gold substrate. While for a single graphene layer, spectral doublets from coupled dimer modes are observed shifted into the near-infrared, these disappear for increasing numbers of layers. These doublets arise from charger-transfer-sensitive gap plasmons, allowing optical measurement to access out-of-plane conductivity in such layered systems. Gating the graphene can thus directly produce plasmon tuning.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24059599 DOI: 10.1021/nl4018463
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189