March 14, 2017
Journal Article

Multi-resonant layered plasmonic films

Abstract

Multi-resonant nanoplasmonic films have numerous applications in areas such as nonlinear optics, sensing, and tamper indication. While techniques such as focused ion beam milling and electron beam lithography can produce high-quality multi-resonant films, these techniques are expensive, serial processes that are difficult to scale at the manufacturing level. Here, we present the fabrication of multi-resonant nanoplasmonic films using a layered stacking technique. Periodically-spaced gold nanocup substrates were fabricated using self-assembled polystyrene nanospheres followed by oxygen plasma etching and metal deposition via magnetron sputter coating. By adjusting etch parameters and initial nanosphere size, it was possible to achieve an optical response ranging from the visible to the near-infrared. Singly resonant, flexible films were first made by performing peel-off using an adhesive-coated polyolefin film. Through stacking layers of the nanofilm, we demonstrate fabrication of multi-resonant films at a fraction of the cost and effort as compared to top-down lithographic techniques.

Revised: February 27, 2020 | Published: March 14, 2017

Citation

De Vetter B.M., B.E. Bernacki, W.D. Bennett, A.L. Schemer-Kohrn, and K.J. Alvine. 2017. Multi-resonant layered plasmonic films. Journal of Nanophotonics 11, no. 1:Article No. 016015. PNNL-SA-120674. doi:10.1117/1.JNP.11.016015