Snapshot Hyperspectral Imaging (SHI) for Revealing Irreversible and Heterogeneous Plasmonic Processes

Plasmon-mediated processes provide unique opportunities for selective photocatalysis, photovoltaics, and electrochemistry. Determining the influence of particle heterogeneity is an unsolved problem because often such processes introduce irreversible changes to the nanocatalysts and/or their surround...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of physical chemistry. C 2018-03, Vol.122 (12), p.6865-6875
Hauptverfasser: Kirchner, Silke R, Smith, Kyle W, Hoener, Benjamin S, Collins, Sean S. E, Wang, Wenxiao, Cai, Yi-Yu, Kinnear, Calum, Zhang, Heyou, Chang, Wei-Shun, Mulvaney, Paul, Landes, Christy F, Link, Stephan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plasmon-mediated processes provide unique opportunities for selective photocatalysis, photovoltaics, and electrochemistry. Determining the influence of particle heterogeneity is an unsolved problem because often such processes introduce irreversible changes to the nanocatalysts and/or their surroundings. The challenge lies in monitoring heterogeneous nonequilibrium dynamics via the slow, serial methods that are intrinsic to almost all spectral acquisition methods with suitable spatial and/or spectral resolution. Here, we present a new metrology, snapshot hyperspectral imaging (SHI), that facilitates in situ readout of the tube lens image and first-order diffraction image of the dark-field scattering from many individual plasmonic nanoparticles to extract their respective spectra simultaneously. Evanescent wave excitation with a supercontinuum laser enabled signal-to-noise ratios greater than 100 with a time resolution of only 1 ms. Throughput of ∼100 simultaneous spectra was achieved with a highly ordered nanoparticle array, yielding a spectral resolution of 0.21 nm/pixel. Additionally, an alternative dark-field excitation geometry utilized a combination of a supercontinuum laser and a reflecting objective for polarization-controlled SHI. Using a simplified version of SHI, we temporally resolve on the millisecond time scale the heterogeneous kinetics of an electrochemical surface redox reaction for many individual gold nanoparticles simultaneously.
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b01398