4.6 Article

Laser-Induced Deposition of Plasmonic Ag and Pt Nanoparticles, and Periodic Arrays

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14010010

Keywords

laser-induced deposition; noble metal NPs; plasmon resonance; nano-grating structures

Funding

  1. RFBR-DFG project (RFBR) [20-58-12015]
  2. RFBR-DFG project (DFG) [BA 4277/16-1]
  3. RFBR [19-33-90239]
  4. Scholarships of the President of the Russian Federation to young scientists and graduate students (Competition SP-2019) [CP-2368.2019.1]

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The laser-induced deposition (LID) approach offers a new possibility for single-step surface decoration with controlled composition, morphology, and spatial distribution of metal nanoparticles. This method successfully demonstrated the formation of Ag, Pt, and mixed Ag-Pt nanoparticles on commercially available precursors.
Surfaces functionalized with metal nanoparticles (NPs) are of great interest due to their wide potential applications in sensing, biomedicine, nanophotonics, etc. However, the precisely controllable decoration with plasmonic nanoparticles requires sophisticated techniques that are often multistep and complex. Here, we present a laser-induced deposition (LID) approach allowing for single-step surface decoration with NPs of controllable composition, morphology, and spatial distribution. The formation of Ag, Pt, and mixed Ag-Pt nanoparticles on a substrate surface was successfully demonstrated as a result of the LID process from commercially available precursors. The deposited nanoparticles were characterized with SEM, TEM, EDX, X-ray diffraction, and UV-VIS absorption spectroscopy, which confirmed the formation of crystalline nanoparticles of Pt (3-5 nm) and Ag (ca. 100 nm) with plasmonic properties. The advantageous features of the LID process allow us to demonstrate the spatially selective deposition of plasmonic NPs in a laser interference pattern, and thereby, the formation of periodic arrays of Ag NPs forming diffraction grating

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