Multiplexed Assembly of Plasmonic Nanostructures Through Charge Inversion on Substrate for Surface Encoding

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Feb 5;12(5):6176-6182. doi: 10.1021/acsami.9b17530. Epub 2020 Jan 23.

Abstract

Plasmonic nanomaterials are excellent and promising building blocks for information encoding and decoding. However, the positioning of multiplexed nanomaterials into recognizable structures remains a major challenge in nanotechnology. Herein, we developed a novel method for fabricating diversified nanostructures through surface charge inversion from amino-modified substrates to carboxyl-modified ones, as well as the corresponding electrostatic-induced assembly of metal nanoparticles. Under optimal conditions, the selected gold nanospheres (NSs) and peanut-like gold nanorods were successively located into patterns of spaced lines on the same substrate. Due to their unique optical properties, these two types of designed nanoarrays exhibited distinct color contrast and spectrum difference under dark-field scattering microscopy. Furthermore, this general strategy can be extended to wide ranges of nanoparticles with different morphologies and compositions for other multifunctional and high-demanding encoding applications.

Keywords: LSPR; encoding; metal nanoparticles; multiplexed assembly; surface charge inversion.