Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays

The plasmonic coupling between the interacting noble metal nanoparticles plays an important role to influence the optical properties of arrays. In this work, we have extended the Mie theory results of our recent communication to include the effect of particle interactions between the alloy nanoparti...

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Main Authors: Amit Bansal, S. S. Verma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2014-05-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4875759
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spelling doaj-fcfe24955c5c403484a32d6da74032be2020-11-25T02:44:55ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262014-05-0145057104057104-1410.1063/1.4875759004405ADVSimulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arraysAmit Bansal0S. S. Verma1Department of Physics, Sant Longowal Institute of Engineering & Technology, Longowal-148106, District-Sangrur, Punjab (India)Department of Physics, Sant Longowal Institute of Engineering & Technology, Longowal-148106, District-Sangrur, Punjab (India)The plasmonic coupling between the interacting noble metal nanoparticles plays an important role to influence the optical properties of arrays. In this work, we have extended the Mie theory results of our recent communication to include the effect of particle interactions between the alloy nanoparticles by varying interparticle distance and number of particles. The localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) peak position, full width at half maxima (FWHM) and scattering efficiency of one dimensional (1D) bimetallic alloy nanosphere (BANS) arrays of earlier optimized compositions i.e. Ag0.75Au0.25, Au0.25Cu0.75 and Ag0.50Cu0.50 have been studied presently by using discrete dipole approximation (DDA) simulations. Studies have been made to optimize size of the nanosphere, number of spheres in the arrays, material and the interparticle distance. It has been found that both the scattering efficiency and FWHM (bandwidth) can be controlled in the large region of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum by varying the number of interacting particles and interparticle distance. In comparison to other alloy arrays, Ag0.50Cu0.50 BANS arrays (each of particle radius 50 nm) shows larger tunability of LSPR with wide bandwidth (essential condition for plasmonic solar cells).http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4875759
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amit Bansal
S. S. Verma
spellingShingle Amit Bansal
S. S. Verma
Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
AIP Advances
author_facet Amit Bansal
S. S. Verma
author_sort Amit Bansal
title Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
title_short Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
title_full Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
title_fullStr Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
title_full_unstemmed Simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
title_sort simulated study of plasmonic coupling in noble bimetallic alloy nanosphere arrays
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series AIP Advances
issn 2158-3226
publishDate 2014-05-01
description The plasmonic coupling between the interacting noble metal nanoparticles plays an important role to influence the optical properties of arrays. In this work, we have extended the Mie theory results of our recent communication to include the effect of particle interactions between the alloy nanoparticles by varying interparticle distance and number of particles. The localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) peak position, full width at half maxima (FWHM) and scattering efficiency of one dimensional (1D) bimetallic alloy nanosphere (BANS) arrays of earlier optimized compositions i.e. Ag0.75Au0.25, Au0.25Cu0.75 and Ag0.50Cu0.50 have been studied presently by using discrete dipole approximation (DDA) simulations. Studies have been made to optimize size of the nanosphere, number of spheres in the arrays, material and the interparticle distance. It has been found that both the scattering efficiency and FWHM (bandwidth) can be controlled in the large region of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum by varying the number of interacting particles and interparticle distance. In comparison to other alloy arrays, Ag0.50Cu0.50 BANS arrays (each of particle radius 50 nm) shows larger tunability of LSPR with wide bandwidth (essential condition for plasmonic solar cells).
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4875759
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