Metal–ceramic composite structures for fabrication of high power density plasmonic devices

Author:

Otto Lauren M.12ORCID,Liu Stephanie E.123,Ng Rowena W.12,Schwartzberg Adam M.2,Aloni Shaul2,Hammack Aeron Tynes12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laminera LLC, Berkeley, California 94703, USA

2. Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

Abstract

The recent decade brought many advances to plasmonics, but high power density plasmonic antennas designed to behave as heaters or operate in high temperature environments are still facing material stability challenges preventing their ultimate use. Gold has been the optimal choice among plasmonic materials but experiences morphology changes at temperature that result in device efficiency reduction and failure. Bulk titanium nitride has been explored as a solution but has deal-breaking tradeoffs in device quality factor. In this paper, we explore via proof-of-concept the use of a metal–ceramic composite structure to determine whether a bulk Au nanorod can provide strong plasmonic resonances while coated with an ultrathin conformal layer of titanium nitride or silica to provide morphological stability and sufficient plasmonic activity without excessive resonance quality degradation. We show SEM-level morphological stability for temperatures up to 500 °C with coatings below 4 nm. Computer modeling suggests the ultrathin titanium nitride has detrimental effects on the strong plasmonic resonances of a Au nanorod. We then looked into other possible coatings for solutions to stabilize high power density plasmonic antennas including plasmonic oxides, metal adhesion layers, and silica, the latter appearing to be the best option while lowering the overall peak electric field intensity, the silica increases the electric field intensity at its boundary.

Funder

Advanced Manufacturing Office

Basic Energy Sciences

Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

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