6533b7d3fe1ef96bd12601ae

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Absorption Properties of Metal–Semiconductor Hybrid Nanoparticles

Natalia Del FattiOlaf SchubertMarcelo Alves-santosGuido GoldoniRosa Di FeliceFabrice ValléeEhud ShavivCarsten SönnichsenUri Banin

subject

Optics and PhotonicsMaterials sciencemetalJanus particlesMetal NanoparticlesPhysics::OpticsGeneral Physics and AstronomyNanoparticleNanotechnologyJanus particlesDielectricSulfidesDiscrete dipole approximationAbsorptionotpical absorption; metal; semiconductor; nanoparticleshybrid nanoparticlesplasmonCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceMicroscopy Electron TransmissionQuantum DotsCadmium CompoundsElectrochemistryNanotechnologyComputer SimulationGeneral Materials ScienceAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)PlasmonexcitonGeneral Engineeringotpical absorptionsemiconductorCondensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall EffectSemiconductorsMetalsQuantum dotChemical physicsHybrid systemnanoparticlesGoldDDA

description

The optical response of hybrid metal-semiconductor nanoparticles exhibits different behaviors due to the proximity between the disparate materials. For some hybrid systems, such as CdS-Au matchstick-shaped hybrids, the particles essentially retain the optical properties of their original components, with minor changes. Other systems, such as CdSe-Au dumbbell-shaped nanoparticles, exhibit significant change in the optical properties due to strong coupling between the two materials. Here, we study the absorption of these hybrids by comparing experimental results with simulations using the discrete dipole approximation method (DDA) employing dielectric functions of the bare components as inputs. For CdS-Au nanoparticles, the DDA simulation provides insights on the gold tip shape and its interface with the semiconductor, information that is difficult to acquire by experimental means alone. Furthermore, the qualitative agreement between DDA simulations and experimental data for CdS-Au implies that most effects influencing the absorption of this hybrid system are well described by local dielectric functions obtained separately for bare gold and CdS nanoparticles. For dumbbell shaped CdSe-Au, we find a shortcoming of the electrodynamic model, as it does not predict the "washing out" of the optical features of the semiconductor and the metal observed experimentally. The difference between experiment and theory is ascribed to strong interaction of the metal and semiconductor excitations, which spectrally overlap in the CdSe case. The present study exemplifies the employment of theoretical approaches used to describe the optical properties of semiconductors and metal nanoparticles, to achieve better understanding of the behavior of metal-semiconductor hybrid nanoparticles. © 2011 American Chemical Society.

https://doi.org/10.1021/nn200645h