Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
Graphene is emerging as a promising material for plasmonics applications due to its
strong light-matter interactions, most of which are theoretically predicted but not yet
experimentally realized. Therefore, the integration of plasmonic nanoparticles to create
metal nanoparticle/graphene composites enables numerous phenomena important for a
range of applications from photonics to catalysis. For these applications it is important
to articulate the coupling of photon-based excitations such as the interaction between
plasmons in each of the material components, as well as their charge-based interactions
dependent upon the energy alignment at the metal/graphene interface. These coupled
phenomena underpin an active application area in graphene-based composites due to
nanoparticle-dependent surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) of graphene phonon
modes. This study reveals the coupling of a graphene/SiC support with Ga-nanoparticlelocalized
surface plasmon resonance, which is of particular interest due to its ability to be
tuned across the UV into the near-IR region. This work is the fi rst demonstration of the
evolving plasmon resonance on graphene during the synthesis of surface-supported metal
nanoparticles, thus providing evidence for the theoretically predicted screening revealed by
a damped resonance with little energy shift. Therefore, the role of the graphene/substrate
heterojunction in tailoring the plasmon resonance for nanoplasmonic applications
is shown. Additionally, the coupled phenomena between the graphene-Ga plasmon
properties, charge transfer, and SERS of graphene vibrational modes are explored.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Losurdo, Maria; Bruno, Giovanni
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