Optical and electronic properties of self-assembled nanoparticle-ligand metasurfaces

ORAL

Abstract

The optical and electronic properties of inorganic nanoparticles organized into two-dimensional lattices sensitively depend on the properties of the organic ligand shell coating the nanoparticles. We study the optical and electronic properties of these two-dimensional metasurfaces consisting of gold nanoparticles functionalized with ligands and self-assembled into macroscopic monolayers on non-templated substrates. Using these metasurfaces we demonstrate an average surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) enhancement factor on the order of 10$^{\mathrm{8}}$ for benzenethiol ligands and study the mechanisms that influence the enhancement. These metasurfaces may provide a platform for the development of low-power, low-cost next-generation chem/bio-sensors and new insights into the organic-inorganic interface at the nanoscale.

*This work was supported with funding provided from the Office of Naval Research

Authors

  • Jake Fontana

    • Naval Research Laboratory
  • John Livenere

    • Norfolk State University
  • Joshua Caldwell

    • Naval Research Laboratory
  • Christopher Spillmann

    • Naval Research Laboratory
  • Jawad Naciri

    • Naval Research Laboratory
  • Ronald Rendell

    • Naval Research Laboratory
  • Banahalli Ratna

    • Naval Research Laboratory