Photonics (Feb 2021)

Interband, Surface Plasmon and Fano Resonances in Titanium Carbide (MXene) Nanoparticles in the Visible to Infrared Range

  • Manuel Gonçalves,
  • Armen Melikyan,
  • Hayk Minassian,
  • Taron Makaryan,
  • Petros Petrosyan,
  • Tigran Sargsian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics8020036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. 36

Abstract

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Since the discovery of the optical properties of two-dimensional (2D) titanium carbide (MXene) conductive material, an ever increasing interest has been devoted towards understanding it as a plasmonic substrate or nanoparticle. This noble metal-free alternative holds promise not only due to its lower cost but also its 2D nature, hydrophilicity and apparent bio-compatibility. Herein, the optical properties of the most widely studied Ti3C2Tx MXene nanosheets are theoretically analyzed and absorption cross-sections are calculated exploiting available experimental data on its dielectric function. The occurrence of quadrupole surface plasmon mode in the optical absorption spectra of large MXene nanoparticles is demonstrated for the first time. The resonance wavelengths corresponding to interband transitions, longitudinal and transversal dipole oscillations and quadrupole longitudinal surface plasmon mode are identified for single and coupled nanoparticles by modeling their shapes as ellipsoids, disks and cylinders. A new mechanism of excitation of longwave transversal surface plasmon oscillations by an external electric field perpendicular to the direction of charge oscillations is presented. Excitingly enough, a new effect in coupled MXene nanoparticles—Fano resonance—is unveiled. The results of calculations are compared to known experimental data on electron absorption spectroscopy, and good agreement is demonstrated.

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