Femtosecond laser reshaping yields gold nanorods with ultranarrow surface plasmon resonances.
Guillermo González-RubioPablo Díaz-NúñezAntonio RiveraAlejandro PradaGloria TardajosJesús González-IzquierdoLuis BañaresPablo LlombartLuis G MacdowellMauricio Alcolea PalafoxLuis M Liz-MarzánOvidio Peña-RodríguezAndrés Guerrero-MartínezPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
The irradiation of gold nanorod colloids with a femtosecond laser can be tuned to induce controlled nanorod reshaping, yielding colloids with exceptionally narrow localized surface plasmon resonance bands. The process relies on a regime characterized by a gentle multishot reduction of the aspect ratio, whereas the rod shape and volume are barely affected. Successful reshaping can only occur within a narrow window of the heat dissipation rate: Low cooling rates lead to drastic morphological changes, and fast cooling has nearly no effect. Hence, a delicate balance must be achieved between irradiation fluence and surface density of the surfactant on the nanorods. This perfection process is appealing because it provides a simple, fast, reproducible, and scalable route toward gold nanorods with an optical response of exceptional quality, near the theoretical limit.