| Literature DB >> 28788459 |
Ahnaf Usman Zillohu1, Nisreen Alissawi2, Ramzy Abdelaziz3, Mady Elbahri4,5.
Abstract
There is a growing interest in modulating the temperature under the illumination of light. As a heat source, metal nanoparticles (NPs) have played an important role to pave the way for a new branch of plasmonics, i.e., thermo-plasmonics. While thermo-plasmonics have been well established in photo-thermal therapy, it has received comparatively less attention in materials science and chemistry. Here, we demonstrate the first proof of concept experiment of local chemistry and graphitization of metalized polymeric nanofibers through thermo-plasmonic effect. In particular, by tuning the plasmonic absorption of the nanohybrid through a change in the thickness of the deposited silver film on the fibers, the thermo-plasmonic effect can be adjusted in such a way that high enough temperature is generated enabling local welding and graphitization of the polymeric nanofibers.Entities:
Keywords: electrospinning; graphitization; plasmonic heat; welding
Year: 2014 PMID: 28788459 PMCID: PMC5453131 DOI: 10.3390/ma7010323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1.Variation of silver nanoparticles’ shape and size with increasing sputtering thickness (white particles on darker fibers). (a) 0.5 nm thick silver coating resulted in isolated round particles; (b) 2 nm thick coating resulted in elongated agglomerates (inset is a closer view). The micrographs were made by mixing the signal from backscattered electron and secondary electron detectors.
Figure 2.UV-Vis spectrum of “polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) fiber-Ag composite” with increasing thickness of silver coat (0.5 to 4 nm).
Figure 3.Effect of 532 nm, 20 mW laser on fibers. (a) Uncoated fibers showed no melting on exposure to laser (encircled area); (b) Fibers coated with 2 nm Ag showed welding/graphitization on exposure to laser.
Figure 4.(a) Raman spectrum of “PVDF fiber-silver NPs” composite with different silver layer thickness (0.5 to 4 nm); (b) Same data as in (a), but plotted on “linear” scale to highlight the presence of D and G bands.