DNA nanotechnology provides a versatile foundation for the chemical assembly of nanostructures. Plasmonic nanoparticle assemblies are of particular interest because they can be tailored to exhibit a broad range of electromagnetic phenomena. In this Letter, we report the assembly of DNA-functionalized nanoparticles into pentamer clusters, which consist of a smaller gold sphere surrounded by a ring of four larger spheres. Magnetic and Fano-like resonances are observed in individual clusters. The DNA plays a dual role: it selectively assembles the clusters in solution and functions as an insulating spacer between the conductive nanoparticles. These particle assemblies can be generalized to a new class of DNA-enabled plasmonic heterostructures that comprise various active and passive materials and other forms of DNA scaffolding.
Ultra-smooth, highly spherical monocrystalline gold particles were prepared by a cyclic process of slow growth followed by slow chemical etching, which selectively removes edges and vertices. The etching process effectively makes the surface tension isotropic, so that spheres are favored under quasi-static conditions. It is scalable up to particle sizes of 200 nm or more. The resulting spherical crystals display uniform scattering spectra and consistent optical coupling at small separations, even showing Fano-like resonances in small clusters. The high monodispersity of the particles we demonstrate should facilitate the self-assembly of nanoparticle clusters with uniform optical resonances, which could in turn be used to fabricate optical metafluids. Narrow size distributions are required not only to control the spectral features, but also the morphology and yield of clusters in certain assembly schemes. KEYWORDS:Gold nanospheres, plasmonics, monodisperse, chemical etching, Fano-like resonance. TOC Graphic 3Accepted version of ACS Nano 7 (12): 11064 (2013) In equilibrium, a nanoscale crystal adopts a polyhedral morphology to minimize its surface free energy. As a result, metallic nanoparticles grown near equilibrium form facets. [1][2][3] Although the plasmon resonances and ease of functionalization 4 make such particles promising 1 for bottom-up assembly of optical resonators 5,6 and isotropic metamaterials, 7 it is difficult to make structures whose optical properties are reproducible from one particle or one multiple-particle cluster to the next since the resonances are often sensitive to features such as sharp corners, 8 number of facets, 9 roughness, 10 and overall size and shape. 11 Moreover, the interparticle optical coupling varies significantly with nanometer-scale changes in gap distance 12 and orientation. 13 The ideal particle for self-assembly of plasmonic structures is therefore not a polyhedron, but a spherical crystal without facets or grain boundaries. However, producing such particles is a materials challenge, since spherical crystals are not stable under any growth conditions. Here we show that a cyclic process of slow growth followed by slow chemical etching, which selectively removes edges and vertices, results in ultra-smooth, highly spherical monocrystalline gold particles. The etching process, which is functionally similar to (but chemically different from) that used to make monocrystalline silver nanospheres for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, 14,15 effectively makes the surface tension isotropic, so that spheres are favored under quasi-static conditions. The resulting spherical crystals display uniform scattering spectra and consistent optical coupling at small separations, even showing Fano-like resonances 16 in small assemblies. The cyclic process we demonstrate could be extended to other metals and, because it is scalable up to particle sizes of 200 nm or more, might be used to create strongly scattering particles for sensors, 17,18 electromagnetic resonators, 7 and oth...
Using experiments and simulations, we investigate the clusters that form when colloidal spheres stick irreversibly to -or "park" on -smaller spheres. We use either oppositely charged particles or particles labeled with complementary DNA sequences, and we vary the ratio α of large to small sphere radii. Once bound, the large spheres cannot rearrange, and thus the clusters do not form dense or symmetric packings. Nevertheless, this stochastic aggregation process yields a remarkably narrow distribution of clusters with nearly 90% tetrahedra at α = 2.45. The high yield of tetrahedra, which reaches 100% in simulations at α = 2.41, arises not simply because of packing constraints, but also because of the existence of a long-time lower bound that we call the "minimum parking" number. We derive this lower bound from solutions to the classic mathematical problem of spherical covering, and we show that there is a critical size ratio α c = (1 + √ 2) ≈ 2.41, close to the observed point of maximum yield, where the lower bound equals the upper bound set by packing constraints. The emergence of a critical value in a random aggregation process offers a robust method to assemble uniform clusters for a variety of applications, including metamaterials.
We synthesize robust clusters of gold satellites positioned with tetrahedral symmetry on the surface of a patchy silica core by adsorption and growth of gold on the patches. First we conduct emulsion polymerization of styrene in the presence of 52 nm silica seeds whose surface has been modified with methacryloxymethyltriethoxysilane (MMS). We derive four-dimple particles from the resulting silica/polystyrene tetrapods. Polystyrene chains are covalently bound to the silica surface within the dimples due to the MMS grafts and they may be thiolated to induce adsorption of 12 nm gold particles. Using chloroauric acid, ascorbic acid and sodium citrate at room temperature, we grow gold from these 12 nm seeds without detachment from or deformation of the dimpled silica surface. We obtain gold satellites of tunable diameter up to 140 nm.
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