Plasmonic materials for optical sensing and spectroscopy
by Reilly, Thomas H., Iii, Ph.D., UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER, 2006, 167 pages; 3239396

Abstract:

The emerging field of plasmonics has great potential for advances in photonic materials, nanolithography and surface enhanced spectroscopy. The recent discovery of enhanced transmission nanoaperture arrays as a plasmonic building block for sub-wavelength optical components has produced substantial interest in a broad set of applied fields.

In this thesis, nanoaperture arrays are evaluated as SERS sensors. A SERS limit of detection study of the apertures arrays was performed and indicates that the enhanced transmission geometry may have useful applications as a molecular sensor. The SERS enhancement factors were calculated for a series of nanoaperture arrays with varied lattice spacing and compared to established SERS substrates. The transmission spectra of the aperture arrays were compared to theoretical predictions. The results indicate that the aperture arrays do not have similar transmission properties to previously published reports and transmission image analysis indicates that individual apertures within the arrays may have widely varying transmission spectra compared to the overall measured transmission spectrum from the array. The transmission image analysis may explain the lack of correlation between the transmission properties of the arrays and the observed SERS enhancement factors.

 
AdviserKathy L. Rowlen
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER
SourceDAI/B 67-10, p. , Feb 2007
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsAnalytical chemistry; Physical chemistry
Publication Number3239396
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