Study of Heat Transfer Dynamics from Gold Nanorods to the Environment via Time-Resolved Infrared Spectroscopy
Abstract
Studying the local solvent surrounding nanoparticles is important to understanding the energy exchange dynamics between the particles and their environment, and there is a need for spectroscopic methods that can dynamically probe the solvent region that is in nearby contact with the nanoparticles. In this work, we demonstrate the use of time-resolved infrared spectroscopy to track changes in a vibrational mode of local water on the time scale of hundreds of picoseconds, revealing the dynamics of heat transfer from gold nanorods to the local water environment. We applied this probe to a prototypical plasmonic photothermal system consisting of organic CTAB bilayer capped gold nanorods, as well as gold nanorods coated with varying thicknesses of inorganic mesoporous-silica. The heat transfer time constant of CTAB capped gold nanorods is about 350 ps and becomes faster with higher laser excitation power, eventually generating bubbles due to superheating in the local solvent. Silica coating of the nanorods slows down the heat transfer and suppresses the formation of superheated bubbles.
Additional Information
© 2016 American Chemical Society. Received 21 October 2015. Accepted 3 February 2016. Published online 8 February 2016. Published in issue 23 February 2016. This work is supported by the Physical Chemistry of Inorganic Nanostructures Program, KC3103, Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the United States Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC02-05CH11232 (A.P.A.), NSF Grant CHE-1213135 (C.B.H.), German Federal Cluster of Excellence "The Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imaging" (H.W.). The authors declare no competing financial interest.Attached Files
Supplemental Material - nn5b06623_si_001.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:569829ec057779f573f8d8a641000ae2
|
1.3 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 114629
- DOI
- 10.1021/acsnano.5b06623
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20220505-565443000
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- DE-AC02-05CH11232
- NSF
- CHE-1213135
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
- Created
-
2022-05-06Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2022-05-06Created from EPrint's last_modified field