Surrounding Effects of Nanomaterials!Fri, 13 Apr 2012 The dissipation of energy from a vibrating gold nanoparticle is strongly
influenced by the surrounding environment, new research shows.
Metal nanoparticles could play a key role in next-generation light
detectors, optical circuits, and cancer therapies. For these future
technologies to be realized, it is important to understand what happens
when nanoparticles are caused to undergo vibrations, and the consequent
scattering of light that can occur due to oscillations, or surface
plasmons, in their free electron cloud. However, little is known about
exactly how these vibrations are affected by the nanoparticle's
immediate surroundings -- in particular, how the environment affects the
dissipation of energy from a nanoparticle when it vibrates.
Sudhiranjan Tripathy at the A*STAR Institute of Materials Research
and Engineering and co-workers, collaborating with Arnaud Arbouet and
colleagues from the National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS) in
France, have now analyzed the effect of different environments on
individual gold nanoparticles, their acoustic vibrations and associated
energy dissipation.
The researchers examined individual nanorings made of gold using
transient absorption spectroscopy, which involves exciting the sample
with a pulse of laser light before measuring the absorbance of light at
various wavelengths. They measured both the vibration period and damping
time -- the rate at which the nanoring loses its energy to its
surroundings.
"When a metallic system is downsized to nanometric dimensions, its
vibration modes can become very different in comparison to its bulk
form," explains Tripathy. "For example, the damping of the acoustic
vibrations is strongly affected by the elastic properties of the
environment and the interface between the nanoparticle and its
environment."
Previous spectroscopy studies have experimented with large groups of
nanoparticles, but the collective approach has its limits because
nanoparticles of different sizes may have different vibration periods.
The researchers overcame the problem by working with individual
nanorings, but the workaround did have its own difficulties.
The first challenge was the nanofabrication of perfectly controlled
and characterized nano-objects. Secondly, there was the issue of
detecting and monitoring the acoustic vibrations of one single metal
nano-object. This meant that the researchers had to measure relative
changes on the order of one in 10 million.
The researchers studied individual nanorings that were surrounded by
either air or glycerol, and focused on how the different environments
affected the damping time of the vibrations. This provided valuable
insight into how energy dissipated from the nanorings to their
environment. Most tellingly, the damping times were significantly
shorter in the highly viscose glycerol.
"Our work opens up exciting perspectives including the use of metal
nanoparticles as mass sensors, or as nanosized probes of the elastic
properties of their local environments," says Tripathy.
Courtesy: ScienceDaily