DocumentCode
1822495
Title
Effect of adsorbed molecules on hot electron relaxation in gold nanoshells
Author
Westcott ; Wolfgang, J.A. ; Nordlander, P.J. ; Halas, N.J. ; Averitt, R.D.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
fYear
2001
fDate
11-11 May 2001
Firstpage
210
Lastpage
211
Abstract
Summary form only given. The optical response of metal nanoparticles is dominated by the electrons and thus is extremely rapid. For bulk metals, the relaxation of hot electrons is understood as an electron-phonon interaction! The relaxation of hot electrons in nanoparticles is more complex and affected by size and embedding medium. Nanoshells are nanoparticles with a thin metal shell coating a dielectric core. For nanoshells, the excitation wavelength of the collective electron oscillation (plasmon resonance) depends on the core size and shell thickness. Nanoshells with gold sulfide core and a gold shell have a plasmon resonance tunable from 600-950 nm. When p-aminobenzoic acid aniline, n-propylamine, or p-mercaptobenzoic acid were added to an aqueous nanoshell solution, the molecules were bound to the gold surface by the amine or thiol groups. Enhanced Raman signals were detected from the bound molecules due to the large local electric fields at the metal nanoshell surface, confirming the binding of the molecules. The transient bleaching of the nanoshell solutions was measured in a degenerate pump-probe experiment. The induced change in transmission occurred because of the change in the dielectric function of the gold shell for a hot electron distribution. The mechanism by which the adsorbed molecules affect the electron relaxation could be energy transfer from the hot electrons to adsorbed molecules or perturbation of the electronic potential of the metal by the bound molecules. This perturbation could induce a decrease in Coulomb screening in the nanoshells.
Keywords
adsorption; dielectric function; electron relaxation time; gold; hot carriers; nanostructured materials; optical saturable absorption; surface enhanced Raman scattering; surface plasmon resonance; time resolved spectra; Au; Coulomb screening; adsorbed molecules effect; aniline; collective electron oscillation; degenerate pump-probe experiment; dielectric core; dielectric function; electron relaxation lifetime; enhanced Raman signals; gold nanoshells; hot electron relaxation; induced dipole moments; metal nanoparticles; molecule-metal interaction; n-propylamine; optical response; p-aminobenzoic acid; p-mercaptobenzoic acid; plasmon resonance; thin metal shell; transient bleaching; Charge carrier processes; Dielectrics; Electron optics; Gold; Nanoparticles; Optical pumping; Optical surface waves; Plasmons; Resonance; Ultraviolet sources;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference, 2001. QELS '01. Technical Digest. Summaries of Papers Presented at the
Conference_Location
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN
1-55752-663-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/QELS.2001.962080
Filename
962080
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