Photonic Fractal Metamaterials: A Metal–Semiconductor Platform with Enhanced Volatile‐Compound Sensing Performance

Advance of photonics media is restrained by the lack of structuring techniques for the 3D fabrication of active materials with long‐range periodicity. A methodology is reported for the engineering of tunable resonant photonic media with thickness exceeding the plasmonic near‐field enhancement region...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced materials (Weinheim) 2020-12, Vol.32 (50), p.e2002471-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Fusco, Zelio, Rahmani, Mohsen, Tran‐Phu, Thanh, Ricci, Chiara, Kiy, Alexander, Kluth, Patrick, Della Gaspera, Enrico, Motta, Nunzio, Neshev, Dragomir, Tricoli, Antonio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Advance of photonics media is restrained by the lack of structuring techniques for the 3D fabrication of active materials with long‐range periodicity. A methodology is reported for the engineering of tunable resonant photonic media with thickness exceeding the plasmonic near‐field enhancement region by more than two orders of magnitude. The media architecture consists of a stochastically ordered distribution of plasmonic nanocrystals in a fractal scaffold of high‐index semiconductors. This plasmonic‐semiconductor fractal media supports the propagation of surface plasmons with drastically enhanced intensity over multiple length scales, overcoming the 2D limitations of established metasurface technologies. The fractal media are used for the fabrication of plasmonic optical gas sensors, achieving a limit of detection of 0.01 vol% at room temperature and sensitivity up to 1.9 nm vol%−1, demonstrating almost a fivefold increase with respect to an optimized planar geometry. Beneficially to their implementation, the self‐assembly mechanism of this fractal architecture allows fabrication of micrometer‐thick media over surfaces of several square centimeters in a few seconds. The designable optical features and intrinsic scalability of these photonic fractal metamaterials provide ample opportunities for applications, bridging across transformation optics, sensing, and light harvesting. Realization of photonic metamaterials is hindered by the lack of multiscale structuring techniques. The stochastically invariant features of fractals are used for engineering a tunable family of active media, consisting of plasmonic nanoresonators in porous semiconductor matrices. This architecture enhances the plasmonic volume over multiple length‐scales, and excellent room‐temperature sensitivity and low detection limits for volatile molecules are demonstrated.
ISSN:0935-9648
1521-4095
DOI:10.1002/adma.202002471