Tetrahedral nanopyramids
made of silver and gold over ITO/glass
surfaces are fabricated. Our protocol is based on nanosphere lithography
(NSL) with the deposition of thicker metal layers. After removing
the microspheres used in the NSL process, an array of metallic tetrahedral
nanostructures of ∼350–400 nm height is formed. The
reported procedure avoids the use of any stabilizing surfactant molecules
that are generally necessary to segregate the individual particles
onto surfaces. We focus here on the optical and the physical properties
of these plasmonic surfaces using near-field spectroscopy in conjunction
with finite difference time domain (FDTD) modeling of the electric
field. Remarkably, FDTD shows that the localized surface plasmon resonance
is confined in the plane formed by the edges of two facing pyramids
that is parallel to the polarization of the impinging excitation laser.
The variable gap between the edges of two adjacent pyramids shows
a broader localized surface plasmon and a larger specific surface
as opposed to the usual nanotriangle array. Localized enhancement
of the electric field is experimentally investigated by coating the
plasmonic surface with a thin film of photosensitive azopolymer onto
the surface of the nanopyramids. Upon irradiation, the deformation
of the surface topography is visualized by atomic force microscopy
and suggests the potentiality of these 3D nanopyramids for near-field
enhancement. This last feature is clearly confirmed by surface-enhanced
Raman scattering measurement with 4-nitrothiophenol molecules deposited
on the pyramid platforms. The potentiality of such 3D nanostructures
in plasmonics and surface spectroscopy is thus clearly demonstrated.
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