Abstract
In this work, we have examined the ultrafast dynamics of shape- and composition-controlled bimetallic Au/Ag core/shell nanostructures with transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) as a function of Ag layer thickness (0-15 nm) and pump excitation fluence (50-500 nJ/pulse). Our synthesis approach generated both bimetallic nanocubes and nanopyramids with distinct dipolar plasmon resonances and plasmon dephasing behavior at the resonance. Lifetimes obtained from TAS at low powers (50 nJ/pulse) demonstrated minimal dependence on the Ag layer thickness, whereas at high power (500 nJ/pulse) a rise in electron-phonon coupling lifetime (τ1) was observed with increasing Ag shell thickness for both nanocubes and nanopyramids. This is attributable to the stronger absorption of the 400 nm pump pulse with higher Ag content, which induced higher electron temperatures. The phonon-phonon scattering lifetime (τ2) also rises with increasing Ag layer, contributed both by the increasing size of the Au/Ag nanostructures as well as by surface chemistry effects. Further, we observed that even the thinnest, 2 nm, Ag shell strongly impacts both τ1 and τ2 at high power despite minimal change in overall size, indicating that the nanostructure composition also strongly impacts the thermalization temperature following absorption of 400 nm light. We also observed a shape-dependent trend at high power, where τ2 increased for the nanopyramids with increasing Ag shell thickness and nanostructure size, but bimetallic nanocubes demonstrated an unexpected decrease in τ2 for the thickest, 15 nm, Ag shell. This was attributed to the larger number of corners and edges in the nanocubes relative to the nanopyramids. (Graph Presented).
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4540-4547 |
| Number of pages | 8 |
| Journal | Journal of Physical Chemistry C |
| Volume | 121 |
| Issue number | 8 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Mar 2 2017 |
Funding
H.F.Z. acknowledges support from Vanderbilt University Discovery Grant, NSF EPSCOR (NSF EPS1004083), NSF BRIGE (EEC 1342185), and the Department of Education for Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need (GAANN) Fellowship under Grant No. P0200A090323. TEM images were obtained with an instrument supported by NSF EPS 1004083. Ultrafast measurements were conducted at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility. We acknowledge William Erwin for help with TEM images.
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