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Published May 14, 2020 | v1
Journal Article Open

Acoustic Vibrations of Al Nanocrystals: Size, Shape, and Crystallinity Revealed by Single-Particle Transient Extinction Spectroscopy

Abstract

Acoustic vibrations in plasmonic nanoparticles, monitored by an all-optical means, have attracted significant increasing interest because they provide unique insight into the mechanical properties of these metallic nanostructures. Al nanostructures are a recently emerging alternative to noble metal nanoparticles, because their broad wavelength tunability and high natural abundance make them ideal for many potential applications. Here, we investigate the acoustic vibrations of individual Al nanocrystals using a combination of electron microscopy and single-particle transient extinction spectroscopy, made possible with a low-pulse energy, high sensitivity, and probe-wavelength-tunable, single-particle transient extinction microscope. For chemically synthesized, faceted Al nanocrystals, the observed vibration frequency scales with the inverse particle diameter. In contrast, triangularly shaped Al nanocrystals support two distinct frequencies, corresponding to their in- and out-of-plane breathing modes. Unlike ensemble measurements, which measure average properties, measuring the damping time of the acoustic vibrations for individual particles enables us to investigate variations of the quality factor on the particle-to-particle level. Surprisingly, we find a large variation in quality factors even for nanocrystals of similar size and shape. This observed heterogeneity appears to result from substantially varying degrees of nanoparticle crystallinity even for chemically synthesized nanocrystals.

Acknowledgement

We acknowledge financial support from the Robert A. Welch Foundation (C-1787 to C.F.L., C-1664 to S.L., and C-1220 to N.J.H.), the Air Force Office of Scientific Research via the Department of Defense Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative, under Award FA9550-15-1-0022 to N.J.H. and S.L., and the National Science Foundation (CHE-1808382 to C.F.L and ECCS-1608917 to S.L.). J.E.S. gratefully acknowledges support from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science (Grant No. CE170100026) and the Australian Research Council Grants Scheme. This work was conducted in part using resources of the Shared Equipment Authority at Rice University.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Created:
October 9, 2023
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October 9, 2023