4.8 Article

Strong Coupling between Plasmonic Gap Modes and Photonic Lattice Modes in DNA-Assembled Gold Nanocube Arrays

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 4699-4703

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01548

Keywords

Noble metal nanoparticles; gold nanocubes; DNA-mediated assembly; gap mode; lattice mode; plasmonic; photonic

Funding

  1. AFOSR [FA9550-12-1-0280, FA9550-11-1-0275]
  2. National Science Foundation's MRSEC program at the Materials Research Center of Northwestern University [DMR-1121262]
  3. Hierarchical Materials Cluster Program Fellowship from Northwestern University
  4. Ryan Fellowship at Northwestern University
  5. Northwestern University's International Institute for Nanotechnology
  6. NSF
  7. NDSEG
  8. MRSEC program (NSF) at the Materials Research Center [DMR-1121262]
  9. International Institute for Nanotechnology (IN)
  10. State of Illinois through IIN

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Control of both photonic and plasmonic coupling in a single optical device represents a challenge due to the distinct length scales that must be manipulated. Here, we show that optical metasurfaces with such control can be constructed using an approach that combines top-down and bottom-up processes, wherein gold nanocubes are assembled into ordered arrays via DNA hybridization events onto a gold film decorated with DNA-binding regions defined using electron beam lithography. This approach enables one to systematically tune three critical architectural parameters: (1) anisotropic metal nanoparticle shape and size, (2) the distance between nanoparticles and a metal surface, and (3) the symmetry and spacing of particles. Importantly, these parameters allow for the independent control of two distinct optical modes, a gap mode between the particle and the surface and a lattice mode that originates from cooperative scattering of many particles in an array. Through reflectivity spectroscopy and finite-difference time-domain simulation, we find that these modes can be brought into resonance and coupled strongly. The high degree of synthetic control enables the systematic study of this coupling with respect to geometry, lattice symmetry, and particle shape, which together serve as a compelling example of how nanoparticle-based optics can be useful to realize advanced nanophotonic structures that hold implications for sensing, quantum plasmonics, and tunable absorbers.

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