Titanium nitride (TiN) has emerged as one of the most promising refractory materials for plasmonic and photonic applications at high temperatures due to its prominent optical properties along with mechanical and thermal stability. From a high temperature standpoint, TiN is a substitution for Au and Ag in the visible to near‐infrared wavelength range, with potential applications including thermophotovoltaics, thermoplasmonics, hot‐electron and high temperature reflective coatings. However, the optical properties and thermal stability of TiN films strongly depend on the growth conditions, such as temperature, partial pressure of the reactive ion gas, ion energy, and substrate orientation. In this work, epitaxial TiN films are grown at 835 °C on an Al2O3 substrate using a radio frequency sputtering method. The oxidization behavior of TiN is investigated at 1000 °C under a medium vacuum condition of 2 × 10–3 mbar, which is relevant for practical technical applications, and the thermal stability at 1400 °C under a high vacuum condition of 2 × 10–6 mbar. The TiN film structure shows an unprecedented structural stability at 1000 °C for a minimum duration of 2 h under a medium vacuum condition, and an exceptional thermal stability at 1400 °C, for 8 h under a high vacuum condition, without any protective coating layer. The work reveals, for the first time to the authors’ knowledge, that the TiN film structure with columnar grains exhibits remarkable thermal stability at 1400 °C due to low‐index interfaces and twin boundaries. These findings unlock the fundamental understanding of the TiN material at extreme temperatures and demonstrate a key step towards fabricating thermally stable photonic/plasmonic devices for harsh environments.
We report on the resonant energy transfer in branched Ag rod-supported carbon dots (C-dots) and its applications for the trace-level sensing of highly reactive oxygen species and organic pollutants based on surface plasmon enhanced energy transfer (SPEET) and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The branched morphology of Ag is found to significantly enhance visible light absorption and thus increases the spectral overlap with C-dot emission. In addition, branched morphology results in the formation of a large number of plasmonic hotspots and efficient propagation of plasmons through the interconnections, as also supported by finite-difference time-domain simulations. Branched Ag-rod—C-dot composite is found to be able to detect 0.02 µM of hydrogen peroxide based on SPEET. The efficient transfer of electrons from C-dots to the Ag rod enhances the SERS efficiency of Ag resulting in an enhancement factor of the order of 108 and enables the composite to detect 10−10 M of the organic pollutant Rhodamine 6G.
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