Silicon nanopillars for field-enhanced surface spectroscopy

Sabrina M. Wells, Igor A. Merkulov, Ivan I. Kravchenko, Nickolay V. Lavrik, Michael J. Sepaniak

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

82 Scopus citations

Abstract

Silicon nanowire and nanopillar structures have drawn increased attention in recent years due in part to their unique optical properties. Herein, electron beam lithography combined with reactive-ion etching is used to reproducibly create individual silicon nanopillars of various sizes, shapes, and heights. Finite difference time domain analysis predicts local field intensity enhancements in the vicinity of appropriately sized and coaxially illuminated silicon nanopillars of approximately 2 orders of magnitude. While this level of enhancement is modest when compared to plasmonic systems, the unique advantage of the silicon nanopillar resonators is that they enhance optical fields in substantially larger volumes. By analyzing experimentally measured strength of the silicon Raman phonon line (500 cm -1), it was determined that nanopillars produced local field enhancements that are consistent with these predictions. Additionally, we demonstrate that a thin layer of Zn phthalocyanine on the nanopillar surface with a total amount of <30 attomoles produced prominent Raman spectra, yielding enhancement factors (EFs) better than 2 orders of magnitude. Finally, silicon nanopillars of cylindrical and elliptical shapes were labeled with different fluorophors and evaluated for their surface-enhanced fluorescence (SEF) capability. The EFs derived from analysis of the acquired fluorescence microscopy images indicate that silicon nanopillar structures can provide enhancements comparable or even stronger than those typically achieved using plasmonic SEF structures without the limitations of the metal-based substrates, such as fluorescence quenching and an insufficiently large probe volume. It is anticipated that dense arrays of silicon nanopillars will enable SEF assays with extremely high sensitivity, while a broader impact of the reported phenomena is anticipated in photovoltaics, subwavelength light focusing, and fundamental nanophotonics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2948-2959
Number of pages12
JournalACS Nano
Volume6
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 24 2012

Keywords

  • FDTD analysis
  • SEF
  • SERS
  • axial illumination
  • fundamental HE11 mode
  • large local field enhancement
  • silicon nanopillars

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Silicon nanopillars for field-enhanced surface spectroscopy'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this