4.8 Article

Controlling the Heat Dissipation in Temperature-Matched Plasmonic Nanostructures

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages 5472-5480

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02131

Keywords

Nanoplasmonics; nanoscale heating; nonlinear effects; opto-thermal properties

Funding

  1. Department of Physics and Astronomy
  2. College of Arts and Sciences of the University of New Mexico

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Heat dissipation in a plasmonic nanostructure is generally assumed to be ruled only by its own optical response even though also the temperature should be considered for determining the actual energy-to-heat conversion. Indeed, temperature influences the optical response of the nanostructure by affecting its absorption efficiency. Here, we show both theoretically and experimentally how, by properly nanopatterning a metallic surface, it is possible to increase or decrease the light-to-heat conversion rate depending on the temperature of the system. In particular, by borrowing the concept of matching condition from the classical antenna theory, we first analytically demonstrate how the temperature sets a maximum value for the absorption efficiency and how this quantity can be tuned, thus leading to a temperature-controlled optical heat dissipation. In fact, we show how the nonlinear dependence of the absorption on the electronphonon damping can be maximized at a specific temperature, depending on the system geometry. In this regard, experimental results supported by numerical calculations are presented, showing how geometrically different nanostructures can lead to opposite dependence of the heat dissipation on the temperature, hence suggesting the fascinating possibility of employing plasmonic nanostructures to tailor the light-to-heat conversion rate of the system.

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