Polycrystallinity of Lithographically Fabricated Plasmonic Nanostructures Dominates Their Acoustic Vibrational Damping
Abstract
The study of acoustic vibrations in nanoparticles provides unique and unparalleled insight into their mechanical properties. Electron-beam lithography of nanostructures allows precise manipulation of their acoustic vibration frequencies through control of nanoscale morphology. However, the dissipation of acoustic vibrations in this important class of nanostructures has not yet been examined. Here we report, using single-particle ultrafast transient extinction spectroscopy, the intrinsic damping dynamics in lithographically fabricated plasmonic nanostructures. We find that in stark contrast to chemically synthesized, monocrystalline nanoparticles, acoustic energy dissipation in lithographically fabricated nanostructures is solely dominated by intrinsic damping. A quality factor of Q = 11.3 ± 2.5 is observed for all 147 nanostructures, regardless of size, geometry, frequency, surface adhesion, and mode. This result indicates that the complex Young's modulus of this material is independent of frequency with its imaginary component being approximately 11 times smaller than its real part. Substrate-mediated acoustic vibration damping is strongly suppressed, despite strong binding between the glass substrate and Au nanostructures. We anticipate that these results, characterizing the optomechanical properties of lithographically fabricated metal nanostructures, will help inform their design for applications such as photoacoustic imaging agents, high-frequency resonators, and ultrafast optical switches.
Copyright and License
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
Acknowledgement
N.J.H and S.L. thank the Robert A. Welch Foundation (Grants C-1220 to N.J.H. and C-1664 to S.L.) and the Air Force (MURI FA9550-15-1-0022) for financial support. S.L. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation (ECCS-1608917). D.C. and J.E.S. acknowledge support from the Australian Research Council grants scheme and the ARC Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science (CE170100026). M.R.J. acknowledges the Robert A. Welch Foundation for young investigator support. We thank Dr. Anneli Joplin for help with editing the manuscript.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 1530-6992
- Welch Foundation
- C-1220
- Welch Foundation
- C-1664
- United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- FA9550-15-1-0022
- Division of Electrical, Communications & Cyber Systems
- ECCS-1608917
- Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science, Australian Research Council
- CE170100026