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. 2015:184:305-20.
doi: 10.1039/c5fd00079c. Epub 2015 Sep 29.

Optical micro-spectroscopy of single metallic nanoparticles: quantitative extinction and transient resonant four-wave mixing

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Optical micro-spectroscopy of single metallic nanoparticles: quantitative extinction and transient resonant four-wave mixing

Lukas Payne et al. Faraday Discuss. 2015.

Abstract

We report a wide-field imaging method to rapidly and quantitatively measure the optical extinction cross-section σ(ext) (also polarisation resolved) of a large number of individual gold nanoparticles, for statistically-relevant single particle analysis. We demonstrate a sensitivity of 5 nm(2) in σ(ext), enabling detection of single 5 nm gold nanoparticles with total acquisition times in the 1 min range. Moreover, we have developed an analytical model of the polarisation resolved σ(ext), which enabled us to extract geometrical particle aspect ratios from the measured σ(ext). Using this method, we have characterized a large number of nominally-spherical gold nanoparticles in the 10-100 nm size range. Furthermore, the method provided measurements of in-house fabricated nanoparticle conjugates, allowing distinction of individual dimers from single particles and larger aggregates. The same particle conjugates were investigated correlatively by phase-resolved transient resonant four-wave mixing micro-spectroscopy. A direct comparison of the phase-resolved response between single gold nanoparticles and dimers highlighted the promise of the four-wave mixing technique for sensing applications with dimers as plasmon rulers.

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