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Femtosecond Laser-Assisted Formation of Hybrid Nanoparticles from Bi-Layer Gold-Silicon Films for Microscale White-Light Source.

Sergei KoromyslovEduard AgeevEkaterina PonkratovaArtem LarinIvan I ShishkinDenis V DanilovIvan S MukhinSergey MakarovDmitry Zuev
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
It is very natural to use silicon as a primary material for microelectronics. However, silicon application in nanophotonics is limited due to the indirect gap of its energy band structure. To improve the silicon emission properties, it can be combined with a plasmonic part. The resulting metal-dielectric (hybrid) nanostructures have shown their excellence compared to simple metallic dielectric nanostructures. Still, in many cases, the fabrication of such structures is time consuming and quite difficult. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate a single-step and lithography-free laser-induced dewetting of bi-layer nanoscale-thickness gold-silicon films supported by a glass substrate to produce hybrid nanoparticles. For obtaining hybrid nanoparticles, we study nonlinear photoluminescence by mapping their optical response and morphology by scanning electron microscopy. This method can be used for the fabrication of arrays of hybrid nanoparticles providing white-light photoluminescence with a good control of their microscopic sizes and position. The developed approach can be useful for a wide range of photonic applications including the all-optical data processing and storage where miniaturization down to micro- and nanoscale together with an efficiency increase is of high demand.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • electron microscopy
  • high speed
  • quantum dots
  • atomic force microscopy
  • energy transfer
  • high density