| Literature DB >> 31244032 |
Danjun Liu1, Tingting Wu2, Qiang Zhang3, Ximiao Wang4, Xuyun Guo1, Yunkun Su4, Ye Zhu1, Minhua Shao5, Huanjun Chen4, Yu Luo2, Dangyuan Lei1,6,7.
Abstract
When the geometric features of plasmonic nanostructures approach the subnanometric regime, nonlocal screening and charge spill-out of metallic electrons will strongly modify the optical responses of the structures. While quantum tunneling resulting from charge spill-out has been widely discussed in the literature, the near-field enhancement saturation caused by the nonlocal screening effect still lacks a direct experimental verification. In this work, we use surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) of graphene to probe the in-plane near-field enhancement limit in gold nanosphere-on-film nanocavities where different layers of graphene are sandwiched between a gold nanosphere and a gold film. Together with advanced transmission electron microscopy cross-sectional imaging and nonlocal hydrodynamic theoretical calculations, the cavity gap width correlated SERS and dark-field scattering measurements reveal that the intrinsic nonlocal dielectric response of gold limits the near-field enhancement factors and mitigates the plasmon resonance red-shift with decreasing the gap width to less than one nanometer. Our results not only verify previous theoretical predictions in both the near-field and far-field regime but also demonstrate the feasibility of controlling the near- and far-field optical response in such versatile plasmonic particle-graphene-on-film nanocavities, which can find great potential in applications of graphene-based photonic devices in the visible and near-infrared region.Entities:
Keywords: charge spill-out; graphene; nanoparticle-on-film nanocavities; nonlocal screening; surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31244032 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b00776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881