4.8 Article

Maskless Preparation of Spatially-Resolved Plasmonic Nanoparticles on Polydimethylsiloxane via In Situ Fluoride-Assisted Synthesis

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 26, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202100774

Keywords

fluorescence microscopy filters; fluoride anions; gold nanoparticles; in situ synthesis; nanoparticle gradients; polydimethylsiloxane; silver nanoparticles; spatially resolved plasmonics

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR)

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A fluoride-assisted method for controlled in-situ synthesis of metal nanoparticles on PDMS is reported, allowing modulation of NP size and coverage over time and space. This method enables the preparation of linear and step gradients of NPs on PDMS surface, showing potential for flexible plasmonics/photonics applications.
Here, a fluoride-assisted route for the controlled in-situ synthesis of metal nanoparticles (NPs) (i.e., AgNPs, AuNPs) on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) is reported. The size and coverage of the NPs on the PDMS surface are modulated with time and over space during the synthetic process, leveraging the improved yield (10x) and faster kinetics (100x) of NP formation in the presence of F- ions, compared to fluoride-free approaches. This enables the maskless preparation of both linear and step gradients and patterns of NPs in 1D and 2D on the PDMS surface. As an application in flexible plasmonics/photonics, continuous and step-wise spatial modulations of the plasmonic features of PDMS slabs with 1D and 2D AgNP gradients on the surface are demonstrated. An excellent spatially resolved tuning of key optical parameters, namely, optical density from zero to 5 and extinction ratio up to 100 dB, is achieved with AgNP gradients prepared in AgF solution for 12 minutes; the performance are comparable to those of commercial dielectric/interference filters. When used as a rejection filter in optical fluorescence microscopy, the AgNP-PDMS slabs are able to reject the excitation laser at 405 nm and retain the green fluorescence of microbeads (100 mu m) used as test cases.

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