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Self-assembly of noble metal-free graphene-copper plasmonic metasurfaces

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Authors

Di Bernardo, Iolanda
Bradford, Jonathan
Fusco, Zelio
Tran, Phu Thanh
Bo, Renheng
Motta, N
Tricoli, Antonio

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Royal Society of Chemistry

Abstract

The strong light confinement and near field enhancement by metallic scatters enabled the development of a large family of plasmonic-based technologies, including broadly used gold metasurfaces. Despite progress, the engineering of non-precious metal plasmonic devices remains challenging, due to the limited chemical stability of most nanostructured metals. Here, we report the preparation of earth-abundant plasmonic metasurfaces by the engineering of copper-graphene nano-resonators, and their use as localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) sensors. We achieve the large-scale self-assembly of Cu nanocrystals, featuring a protective graphene film, by one-step reduction of CuO nanoparticle networks in a hydrocarbon-containing atmosphere. Microscopic and spectroscopic investigations reveal that coalescence and reduction of the CuO nanoparticles during graphene growth result in the formation of graphene-encapsulated metallic Cu nano-islands (NIs). These Cu–graphene metasurfaces can detect down to 1% concentrations of toluene gas at room temperature, displaying a reproducible and rapid LSPR shift of 0.2 nm. Finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulation and structural characterization reveal that the graphene layer significantly improves the Cu crystals’ long-term stability, leading to a prolonged LSPR performance over periods of three months. These insights provide promising directions for the development of earth-abundant plasmonic materials with applications ranging from biosensing to photo-catalysis and other optoelectronic devices.

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Journal of Materials Chemistry C: materials for optical and electronic devices

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2099-12-31
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