JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Plasmonic nanosnowmen with a conductive junction as highly tunable nanoantenna structures and sensitive, quantitative and multiplexable surface-enhanced Raman scattering probes.

Nano Letters 2014 November 13
The precise design and synthesis of plasmonic nanostructures allow us to manipulate, enhance, and utilize the optical characteristics of metallic materials. Although many multimeric structures (e.g., dimers) with interparticle nanogap have been heavily studied, the plasmonic nanostructures with a conductive junction have not been well studied mostly because of the lack of the reliable synthetic methods that can reproducibly and precisely generate a large number of the plasmonic nanostructures with a controllable conductive nanojunction. Here, we formed various asymmetric Au-Ag head-body nanosnowman structures with a highly controllable conductive nanojunction and studied their plasmon modes that cover from visible to near-infrared range, electromagnetic field enhancement, and surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) properties. It was shown that change in the plasmonic neck region between Au head and Ag body nanoparticles and symmetry breaking using different sizes and compositions within a structure can readily and controllably introduce various plasmon modes and change the electromagnetic field inside and around a nanosnowman structure. The charge-transfer and capacitive coupling plasmon modes at low frequencies are tunable in the snowman structure, and subtle change in the conductive junction area of the nanosnowman dramatically affects the resulting electromagnetic field and optical signal. The relationships between the electromagnetic field distribution and enhancement in the snowman structure, excitation laser wavelength, and Raman dye were also studied, and it was found that the strongest electromagnetic field was observed in the crevice area on the junction and synthesizing a thinner and sharper neck junction is critical to generate the stronger electromagnetic field in the crevice area and to obtain the charge-transfer mode-based near-infrared signal. We have further shown that highly reproducible SERS signals can be generated from these nanosnowman structures with a linear dependence on particle concentration (5 fM to 1 pM) and the SERS-enhancement factor values of >10(8) can be obtained with the aid of the resonance effect in SERS. Finally, a wide range of LSPR bands with high tunability along with high structural reproducibility and high synthetic yield make the nanosnowman structures as very good candidates for practically useful multiple-wavelength-compatible, quantitative and sensitive SERS probes, and highly tunable nanoantenna structures.

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