Monolayer Plasmonic Nanoframes as Large-Area, Broadband Metasurface Absorbers

Small. 2022 Aug;18(33):e2201171. doi: 10.1002/smll.202201171. Epub 2022 Jul 20.

Abstract

Broadband absorbers are useful ultraviolet protection, energy harvesting, sensing, and thermal imaging. The thinner these structures are, the more device-relevant they become. However, it is difficult to synthesize ultrathin absorbers in a scalable and straightforward manner. A general and straightforward synthetic strategy for preparing ultrathin, broadband metasurface absorbers that do not rely on cumbersome lithographic steps is reported. These materials are prepared through the surface-assembly of plasmonic octahedral nanoframes (NFs) into large-area ordered monolayers via drop-casting with subsequent air-drying at room temperature. This strategy is used to produce three types of ultrathin broadband absorbers with thicknesses of ≈200 nm and different lattice symmetries (loose hexagonal, twisted hexagonal, dense hexagonal), all of which exhibit efficient light absorption (≈90%) across wavelengths ranging from 400-800 nm. Their broadband absorption is attributed to the hollow morphologies of the NFs, the incorporation of a high-loss material (i.e., Pt), and the strong field enhancement resulting from surface assembly. The broadband absorption is found to be polarization-independent and maintained for a wide range of incidence angles (±45°). The ability to design and fabricate broadband metasurface absorbers using this high-throughput surface-based assembly strategy is a significant step toward the large-scale, rapid manufacturing of nanophotonic structures and devices.

Keywords: lithography-free; metasurfaces; plasmonic nanoframes; polarization independent; surface-assembly; ultrathin broadband absorbers; wide incident angle insensitive.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Light*
  • Surface Plasmon Resonance* / methods