A Thermal Plasmonic Sensor Platform: Resistive Heating of Nanohole Arrays
Journal article, 2014

We have created a simple and efficient thermal plasmonic sensor platform by letting a DC current heat plasmonic nanohole arrays. The sensor can be used to determine thermodynamic parameters in addition to monitoring molecular reactions in real-time. As an application example, we use the thermal sensor to determine the kinetics and activation energy for desorption of thiol monolayers on gold. Further, the temperature of the metal can be measured optically by the spectral shift of the bonding surface plasmon mode (0.015 nm/K). We show that this resonance shift is caused by thermal lattice expansion, which reduces the plasma frequency of the metal. The sensor is also used to determine the thin film thermal expansion coefficient through a theoretical model for the expected resonance shift.

gold

nanohole

Plasmon

thermal expansion

current

temperature

Author

Mudassar Mumtaz Virk

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Chemical Physics

Kunli Xiong

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

Mikael Svedendahl

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

Mikael Käll

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

Andreas Dahlin

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Bionanophotonics

Nano Letters

1530-6984 (ISSN) 1530-6992 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 6 3544-3549

Subject Categories

Nano Technology

DOI

10.1021/nl5011542

More information

Created

10/8/2017