4.6 Article

A Tunable Nanoplasmonic Mirror at an Electrochemical Interface

Journal

ACS PHOTONICS
Volume 5, Issue 11, Pages 4604-4616

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.8b01105

Keywords

metamaterials; nanoparticle self-assembly; electrochemical interface; realtime tunability; plasmonics; electrosorption

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/L02098X/1]
  2. European Research Council
  3. China Scholarship Council [201506320194]
  4. Seagate Technology through the Centre for Micromagnetics and Information Technologies (MINT) at the University of Minnesota
  5. H2020-MSCA individual fellowship

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Designing tunable optical metamaterials is one of the great challenges in photonics. Strategies for reversible tuning of nanoengineered devices are currently being sought through electromagnetic or piezo effects. For example, bottom-up self-assembly of nanoparticles at solid I liquid or liquid I liquid interfaces can be used to tune optical responses by varying their structure either chemically or through applied voltage. Here, we report on a fully reversible tunable color mirror based on a TiN-coated Ag substrate immersed in an aqueous solution of negatively charged Au-nanoparticles (NPs). Switching electrode potential can be used to fully control the assembly/disassembly of NPs at the electrode I electrolyte interface within a 0.6 V wide electrochemical window. The plasmon coupling between the electrode and the adsorbed NP array at high positive potentials produces a dip in the optical reflectance spectrum, creating the absorber state. Desorption of NPs at low potentials eliminates the dip, returning the system to the reflective mirror state. The intensity and wavelength of the dip can be finely tuned through electrode-potential and electrolyte concentration. The excellent match between the experimental data and the theory of optical response for such system allows us to extract valuable information on equilibrium and kinetic properties of NP-assembly/disassembly. Together with modeling of the latter, this study promotes optimization of such meta-surfaces for building electrotunable reflector devices.

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