A Microshutter for the Nanofabrication of Plasmonic Metal Alloys with Single Nanoparticle Composition Control
Journal article, 2023

Alloying offers an increasingly important handle in nanomaterials design in addition to the already widely explored size and geometry of nanostructures of interest. As the key trait, the mixing of elements at the atomic level enables nanomaterials with physical or chemical properties that cannot be obtained by a single element alone, and subtle compositional variations can significantly impact these properties. Alongside the great potential of alloying, the experimental scrutiny of its impact on nanomaterial function is a challenge because the parameter space that encompasses nanostructure size, geometry, chemical composition, and structural atomic-level differences among individuals is vast and requires unrealistically large sample sets if statistically relevant and systematic data are to be obtained. To address this challenge, we have developed a microshutter device for spatially highly resolved physical vapor deposition in the lithography-based fabrication of nanostructured surfaces. As we demonstrate, it enables establishing compositional gradients across a surface with single nanostructure resolution in terms of alloy composition, which subsequently can be probed in a single experiment. As a showcase, we have nanofabricated arrays of AuAg, AuPd, and AgPd alloy nanoparticles with compositions systematically controlled at the level of single particle rows, as verified by energy dispersive X-ray and single particle plasmonic nanospectroscopy measurements, which we also compared to finite-difference time-domain simulations. Finally, motivated by their application in state-of-the-art plasmonic hydrogen sensors, we investigated PdAu alloy gradient arrays for their hydrogen sorption properties. We found distinctly composition-dependent kinetics and hysteresis and revealed a composition-dependent contribution of a single nanoparticle response to the ensemble average, which highlights the importance of alloy composition screening in single experiments with single nanoparticle resolution, as offered by the microshutter nanofabrication approach.

microshutter

physical vapor deposition

nanoalloys

nanofabrication

single particle

nanoparticles

plasmonic

Author

Carl Andersson

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

Olga Serebrennikova

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

ConScience AB

Christopher Tiburski

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

Svetlana Alekseeva

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

ConScience AB

Joachim Fritzsche

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

Christoph Langhammer

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

ACS Nano

1936-0851 (ISSN) 1936-086X (eISSN)

Vol. 17 16 15978-15988

Rambidrag inom utlysningen "Materials Science 2015"

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) (RMA15-0052), 2016-05-01 -- 2021-06-30.

Subject Categories

Chemical Process Engineering

Materials Chemistry

Other Physics Topics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1021/acsnano.3c04147

PubMed

37535838

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9