Imaging nanoporous metals with beams of
electrons provides deep insights into the unusual optical properties of these
materials
Gold is
usually thought of as being a shiny metal — however, in its porous form, gold
actually appears dull and black. The surfaces of nanoporous gold are rough and
the metal loses its shine. Michel Bosman at the A*STAR Institute of Materials
Research and Engineering and co-workers have now experimentally demonstrated
that the dullness is a consequence of the way incoming light couples to the
electrons on the gold surface1.
A beam
of light hitting metal can cause all of the electrons at the surface to
oscillate in unison. If the light is within an appropriate narrow band of
wavelengths, it gets absorbed by the surface and creates half-matter hybrid
particles known as surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs). Bosman and his team
showed that the narrow-band absorption of many SPPs across a surface can
combine to give the broadband high-absorption characteristics of nanoporous
materials. “Our measurements show that these materials are not black at all
when looked at up close; they are actually very colorful,” explains Bosman.
“They only appear black to us because we look at them from far away, where over
a large area all the different colors have been absorbed.”
These
effects caused by the SPPs occur at the sub-micron level. For this reason,
conventional optical imaging methods do not offer the resolution necessary to
view SPPs directly. In response, the team used imaging techniques based on
electron beams. By firing electrons at the surface and measuring the energy
that they lose during their interaction with the material, Bosman and his team
were able to calculate the energy required to create a SPP, and from this they
could infer the wavelength of light that it would absorb.
The researchers
scanned their electron beam across both gold and silver films, which enabled
them to generate a two-dimensional map showing both the wavelength of light
absorbed at a particular point as well as the local surface geometry (see
image). The varying shape and size of the nanopores gave rise to SPPs that
absorb light at a wide range of wavelengths.
The
concept could lead to improved power conversion efficiency in photovoltaic
devices. “These results show that it is possible to design the color of a gold
or silver film,” says Bosman. “It will, for example, be possible to more
efficiently absorb the energy of sunlight, by tuning the light absorption of
the gold or silver to that of the solar spectrum.”
The
A*STAR-affiliated researchers contributing to this research are from the Institute for Materials Research and
Engineering
References
- Bosman, M.,
Anstis, G. R., Keast, V. J., Clarke, J. D. & Cortie, M. B. Light
splitting in nanoporous gold and silver. ACS Nano 6,
319–326 (2012). | article
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