4.8 Article

Real-Time Optical Measurements of Nanoparticle-Induced Melting and Resolidification Dynamics

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 505-514

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c09212

Keywords

photothermal microscopy; nanoscale melting; thermoplasmonics; heat transport; nanoheater

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In this study, the photothermally induced nanoscale dynamics of rapid melting and resolidification of a thin layer of molecular material surrounding a nanoparticle were investigated using an all-optical approach. By modulating the medium's dielectric constant through absorption of a low-duty-cycle laser pulse train by a single nanoparticle, the experimental data were compared with results from coupled optical-thermal numerical simulations to infer a phase change and the liquid/solid interface dynamics. The experimental/computational workflow presented in this proof-of-principle study will facilitate future explorations of material parameters at nanoscale.
The photothermally induced nanoscale dynamics of rapid melting and resolidification of a thin layer of molecular material surrounding a nanoparticle is examined in real time by an all-optical approach. The method employs pulsed periodic modulation of the medium's dielectric constant through absorption of a low-duty-cycle laser pulse train by a single nanoparticle that acts as a localized heating source. Interpretation of experimental data, including inference of a phase change and of the liquid/solid interface dynamics, is obtained by comparing experimental data with results from coupled optical-thermal numerical simulations. The combined experimental/computational workflow pre-sented in this proof-of-principle study will enable future explorations of material parameters at nanoscale, which are often different from their bulk values and in many cases difficult to infer from macroscopic measurements.

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