Chemosensors (Mar 2019)

Long- and Short-Range Ordered Gold Nanoholes as Large-Area Optical Transducers in Sensing Applications

  • Maura Cesaria,
  • Adriano Colombelli,
  • Daniela Lospinoso,
  • Antonietta Taurino,
  • Enrico Melissano,
  • Roberto Rella,
  • Maria Grazia Manera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors7010013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 13

Abstract

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Unconventional lithography (such as nanosphere lithography (NSL) and colloidal lithography (CL)) is an attractive alternative to sequential and very expensive conventional lithography for the low-cost fabrication of large-area nano-optical devices. Among these, nanohole (NH) arrays are widely studied in nanoplasmonics as transducers for sensing applications. In this work, both NSL and CL are implemented to fabricate two-dimensional distributions of gold NHs. In the case of NSL, highly ordered arrays of gold NHs distributed in a hexagonal lattice onto glass substrates were fabricated by a simple and reproducible approach based on the self-assembling of close-packed 500 nm diameter polystyrene particles at an air/water interface. After the transfer onto a solid substrate, the colloidal masks were processed to reduce the colloidal size in a controllable way. In parallel, CL was implemented with short-range ordered gold NH arrays onto glass substrates that were fabricated by electrostatically-driven self-assembly of negatively charged colloids onto a polydiallyldimethylammonium (PDDA) monolayer. These distributions were optimized as a function of the colloidal adsorption time. For both approaches, controllable and reproducible procedures are presented and discussed. The optical responses of the NH structures are related to the short-range ordering level, and their good performances as refractive index transducers are demonstrated.

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