RESUMEN
Transient absorption microscopy is used to examine the breathing modes of single gold nanowires in highly viscous liquids. By performing measurements on the same wire in air and liquid, the damping contribution from the liquid can be separated from the intrinsic damping of the nanowire. The results show that viscous liquids strongly reduce the vibrational lifetimes but not to the extent predicted by standard models for nanomaterial-liquid interactions. To explain these results a general theory for compressible viscoelastic fluid-structure interactions is developed. The theory results are in good agreement with experiment, which confirms that compressible non-Newtonian flow phenomena are important for vibrating nanostructures. This is the first theoretical study and experimental measurement of the compressible viscoelastic properties of simple liquids.
Asunto(s)
Elasticidad , Nanocables/química , ViscosidadRESUMEN
In recent years there has been considerable effort in developing ultra-sensitive imaging techniques based on absorption. This mini-review describes recent results from our laboratory on detecting single nano-objects using transient absorption microscopy. This technique is extremely flexible, allowing the detection of single semiconductor and metal nanostructures with high sensitivity. The goal of this review is to illustrate key points in implementing transient absorption microscopy for ultra-sensitive detection, as well as to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this technique compared to other optical absorption based methods.
RESUMEN
The lifetimes of the acoustic vibrations of metal nanostructures depend sensitively on the properties of the environment, such as the acoustic impedance and viscosity. In order to accurately study these effects, they have to be separated from the damping processes that are inherent to the nanostructure. Here we show that this can be done experimentally by investigating individual gold nanowires suspended over a trench in air and liquid environments. The experiments were done by ultrafast pump-probe microscopy, recording transient absorption traces at the same point on the nanowire in both environments. These first experiments were performed with water, and the measured vibrational quality factors due to the presence of water were compared to continuum mechanics calculations for a cylinder in a homogeneous environment. Good agreement was found between the experimental quality factors and the calculated values. The continuum mechanics analysis shows that damping is dominated by the acoustic impedance of the solvent rather than by its viscosity for the nanowires in the present experiments. This experimental technique opens up the possibility of studying the effect of viscosity on the high frequency vibrational motions of nanostructures for a variety of liquids.
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The optical extinction of single nanoparticles can be sensitively detected by spatial modulation spectroscopy (SMS), where the particle is moved in and out of a tightly focused laser beam with a piezo-device. Here we show that high sensitivity can be obtained by modulating the beam with a galvo-mirror system, rather than by moving the sample. This work demonstrates an inexpensive method for making a SMS microscope, and shows how an existing laser scanning microscope can be adapted for SMS measurements. The galvo-mirror technique also allows SMS measurements to be performed in a liquid, which is difficult to do with piezo-modulation.
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Over the past decade, there have been a number of transient absorption studies of the acoustic vibrational modes of metal and semiconductor nanoparticles. This Perspective provides an overview of this work. The way that the frequencies of the observed modes depend on the size and shape of the particles is described, along with their damping. Future research directions are also discussed, especially how these measurements provide information about the way nano-objects interact with their environment.
RESUMEN
The surface plasmon polariton (SPP) modes of gold nanobars (nanowires with rectangular dimensions) have been investigated by scanning pump-probe microscopy. In these experiments the nanobars were suspended over trenches cut in glass coverslips, and propagating SPP modes were launched in the supported portion of the nanobar by focusing a near-IR pump laser beam at the end of the nanobar. Transient absorption images were then collected by scanning the probe laser over the nanobar using a galvo-mirror system. The images show that the trench has a large effect on the SPP modes, specifically, for approximately half the nanowires the propagation length is significantly reduced after the trench. Finite element calculations were performed to understand this effect. The calculations show that the pump laser excites bound and leaky modes (modes that have their fields localized at the nanobar/glass or nanobar/air interfaces, respectively) in the supported portions of the nanobars. These modes propagate along the nanobar. When they meet the trench their field distributions are altered. The modes that derive from the bound mode are strongly damped over the trench. Thus, the bound mode is not reconstituted on the opposite side of the trench, and only the leaky mode contributes to the signal. Because the bound and leaky modes can have different propagation lengths, the propagation lengths measured in our experiments can change from one side of the trench to the other. The results show how the substrate can be engineered to control the SPP modes in metal nanostructures.
RESUMEN
Semiconductor nanostructures produced by wet chemical synthesis are extremely heterogeneous, which makes single particle techniques a useful way to interrogate their properties. In this paper the ultrafast dynamics of single CdTe nanowires are studied by transient absorption microscopy. The wires have lengths of several micrometers and lateral dimensions on the order of 30 nm. The transient absorption traces show very fast decays, which are assigned to charge carrier trapping into surface defects. The time constants vary for different wires due to differences in the energetics and/or density of surface trap sites. Measurements performed at the band edge compared to the near-IR give slightly different time constants, implying that the dynamics for electron and hole trapping are different. The rate of charge carrier trapping was observed to slow down at high carrier densities, which was attributed to trap-state filling. Modulations due to the fundamental and first overtone of the acoustic breathing mode were also observed in the transient absorption traces. The quality factors for these modes were similar to those measured for metal nanostructures, and indicate a complex interaction with the environment.