4.8 Article

Mechanotunable Surface Lattice Resonances in the Visible Optical Range by Soft Lithography Templates and Directed Self-Assembly

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 11, Issue 31, Pages 28189-28196

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b08871

Keywords

stretchable optics; strain-sensing; surface lattice resonance; Bragg reflector; template-assisted self-assembly

Funding

  1. Volkswagen Foundation through Freigeist Fellowship
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) within Cluster of Excellence Center for Advancing Electronics Dresden' (cfaed)
  3. Elite Network Bavaria (ENB) of the Elite Study Program Macromolecular Science
  4. German Federal Environmental Foundation (DBU)

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We demonstrate a novel colloidal self-assembly approach toward obtaining mechanically tunable, cost-efficient, and low-loss plasmonic nanostructures that show pronounced optical anisotropy upon mechanical deformation. Soft lithography and template-assisted colloidal self-assembly are used to fabricate a stretchable periodic square lattice of gold nanoparticles on macroscopic areas. We stress the impact of particle size distribution on the resulting optical properties. To this end, lattices of narrowly distributed particles (similar to 2% standard deviation in diameter) are compared with those composed of polydisperse ones (similar to 14% standard deviation). The enhanced particle quality sharpens the collective surface lattice resonances by 40% to achieve a full width at half-maximum as low as 16 nm. This high optical quality approaches the theoretical limit for this system, as revealed by electromagnetic simulations. One hundred stretching cycles demonstrate a reversible transformation from a square to a rectangular lattice, accompanied by polarization-dependent optical properties. On the basis of these findings we envisage the potential applications as strain sensors and mechanically tunable filters.

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