4.8 Article

Nematic Order, Plasmonic Switching and Self-Patterning of Colloidal Gold Bipyramids

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202102854

Keywords

bipyramid; electric switching; gold nanoparticles; nematic order; surface plasmon resonance; topological soliton

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51973070, 51773069]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou [2019050001]
  3. Innovative Team Project of Education Bureau of Guangdong Province
  4. Startup Foundation from SCNU
  5. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Optical Information Materials and Technology [2017B030301007]
  6. 111 Project
  7. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR-1810513]
  8. National Science Foundation [ACI-1532235, ACI-1532236]

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Dispersing pentagonal gold bipyramids in nematic liquid crystals allows for narrow and controlled polarization-dependent surface plasmon resonance spectra, with easy electric switching. The bipyramids orient with their C-5 rotation symmetry axes along the nematic director, showing spatially homogeneous density in aligned samples. Topological solitons enable spatial reorganization of the nanoparticles based on elastic free energy density within their micrometer-scale structures.
Dispersing inorganic colloidal nanoparticles within nematic liquid crystals provides a versatile platform both for forming new soft matter phases and for predefining physical behavior through mesoscale molecular-colloidal self-organization. However, owing to formation of particle-induced singular defects and complex elasticity-mediated interactions, this approach has been implemented mainly just for colloidal nanorods and nanoplatelets, limiting its potential technological utility. Here, orientationally ordered nematic colloidal dispersions are reported of pentagonal gold bipyramids that exhibit narrow but controlled polarization-dependent surface plasmon resonance spectra and facile electric switching. Bipyramids tend to orient with their C-5 rotation symmetry axes along the nematic director, exhibiting spatially homogeneous density within aligned samples. Topological solitons, like heliknotons, allow for spatial reorganization of these nanoparticles according to elastic free energy density within their micrometer-scale structures. With the nanoparticle orientations slaved to the nematic director and being switched by low voltages approximate to 1 V within a fraction of a second, these plasmonic composite materials are of interest for technological uses like color filters and plasmonic polarizers, as well as may lead to the development of unusual nematic phases, like pentatic liquid crystals.

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