Photothermal heating as a strategy to align anisotropic metal nanoparticles within polymeric films

POSTER

Abstract

Thin polymer films containing aligned anisotropic metal nanoparticles are desirable for potential optical applications (e.g., polarizers and filters), as well as for fundamental research (e.g., micro-rheology). Experimentally, achieving alignment at dilute particle loading levels is challenging as reduced inter-particle coupling prevents self-organization or packing. Mechanical sample stretching (to several times its original length) or applications of a strong electric field during film casting are common approaches. However, both schemes result in polymeric systems that are fundamentally altered (with highly elongated chains) and thereby, limit the ability to probe the innate polymer dynamics. An alternative approach is to apply an electric field while simultaneously undergoing photothermal heating. In this case, application of light resonant with the surface plasmon of the nanoparticle results in localized heating, melting only the immediate surrounding polymer and enabling electric field driven reorientation. Because the environment within the small (< 1 μm) molten region is highly constrained and entangled, effects from fabrication on the polymer should be minimized.

*Support from National Science Foundation CMMI-1069108 and CMMI-1462966

Presenters

  • Daniela Fontecha

    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State Univ

Authors

  • Daniela Fontecha

    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State Univ
  • Honglu Huang

    • Fiber and Polymer Science, North Carolina State Univ
    • Fiber and Polymer Science, North Carolina State University
  • Gabriel Firestone

    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State Univ
    • Physics, NC State University
    • Physics, North Carolina State Univ
  • Laura Clarke

    • Physics, NC State University
    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State Univ
  • Jason Bochinski

    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State Univ