4.6 Article

Structural and Optical Properties of Discrete Dendritic Pt Nanoparticles on Colloidal Au Nanoprisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 120, Issue 37, Pages 20843-20851

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b02103

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Clare College Junior Research Fellowship
  2. Gates Cambridge Scholarship
  3. European Union [312483 - ESTEEM2]
  4. European Research Council [291522 3DIMAGE]
  5. Research Corporation for Science Advancement

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Catalytic and optical properties can be coupled by combining different metals into nanoscale architectures in which both the shape and the composition provide fine-tuning of functionality. Here, discrete, small Pt nanoparticles (diameter = 3-6 nm) were grown in linear arrays on Au nanoprisms, and the resulting structures are shown to retain strong localized surface plasmon resonances. Multidimensional electron microscopy and spectroscopy techniques (energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, electron tomography, and electron energy-loss spectroscopy) were used to unravel their local composition, three-dimensional morphology, growth patterns, and optical properties. The composition and-tomographic analyses disclose otherwise ambiguous details of the Pt-decorated Au nanoprisms, revealing that, both pseudo-spherical protrusions and dendrite Pt nanoparticles grow on all faces of the nanoprisms (the faceted or occasionally twisted morphologies of which are also revealed), and shed-light on the alignment,of the Pt nanoparticles. The electron energy-loss spectrostopy investigations show that the Au nanoprisms support multiple localized surface plasmon resonances despite the presence of pendant Pt nanoparticles. The plasmonic fields at the surface of the nanoprisms indeed extend into the Pt nanoparticles, opening possibilities for combined optical and catalytic applications. These insights pave the way toward comprehensive nanoengineering of multifunctional bimetallic nanostructures, with potential applications in plasmon-enhanced catalysis and in situ monitoring of chemical processes via surface-enhanced spectroscopy.

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