(143f) Wavelength Tunable Infrared Perfect Absorption in Plasmonic Nanocrystal Monolayers
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Forum
Nanoscale Science Engineering Forum (NSEF): Faculty Candidate
Monday, October 28, 2024 - 2:10pm to 2:30pm
The ability to efficiently absorb light in ultrathin (subwavelength) layers is essential for modern electro-optic devices, including detectors, sensors, and nonlinear modulators. Tailoring these ultrathin filmsâ spectral, spatial, and polarimetric properties is highly desirable for many, if not all, of the above applications. Doing so, however, often requires costly lithographic techniques or exotic materials, limiting scalability. Here we propose, demonstrate, and analyze a mid-infrared absorber architecture leveraging monolayer films of nanoplasmonic colloidal tin-doped indium oxide nanocrystals (ITO NCs). We fabricate a series of ITO NC monolayer films using the liquidâair interface method; by synthetically varying the Sn dopant concentration in the NCs, we achieve spectrally selective perfect absorption tunable between wavelengths of two and five micrometers. We achieve monolayer thickness-controlled coupling strength tuning by varying NC size, allowing access to different coupling regimes. Furthermore, we synthesize a bilayer film that enables broadband absorption covering the entire midwave IR region (λ = 3â5 μm). We demonstrate a scalable platform, with perfect absorption in monolayer films only hundredths of a wavelength in thickness, enabling strong lightâmatter interaction, with potential applications for molecular detection and ultrafast nonlinear optical applications.