
Proceedings Paper
Nanostencil lithography for high-throughput fabrication of infrared plasmonic sensorsFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
We demonstrate a novel fabrication approach for high-throughput fabrication of engineered infrared plasmonic nanorod
antenna arrays with Nanostencil Lithography (NSL). NSL technique, relying on deposition of materials through a
shadow mask, offers the flexibility and the resolution to fabricate radiatively engineer nanoantenna arrays for excitation
of collective plasmonic resonances. Overlapping these collective plasmonic resonances with molecular specific
absorption bands can enable ultrasensitive vibrational spectroscopy. First, nanorod antenna arrays fabricated using NSL
are investigated using SEM and optical spectroscopy, and compared against the nanorods with the same dimensions
fabricated using EBL. No irregularities on the periodicity or the physical dimensions are detected for NSL fabricated
nanorods. We also confirmed that the antenna arrays fabricated by NSL shows high optical quality similar to EBL
fabricated ones. Furthermore, we show nanostencils can be reused multiple times to fabricate selfsame structures with
identical optical responses repeatedly and reliably. This capability is particularly useful when high-throughput replication
of the optimized nanoparticle arrays is desired. In addition to its high-throughput capability, NSL permits fabrication of
plasmonic devices on surfaces that are difficult to work with electron/ion beam techniques. Nanostencil lithography is a
resist free process thus allows the transfer of the nanopatterns to any planar substrate whether it is conductive, insulating
or magnetic. As proof of the versatility of the NSL technique, we show fabrication of plasmonic structures in variety of
geometries. We also demonstrate that nanostencil lithography can be used to achieve functional plasmonic devices in a
single fabrication step, on variety of substrates. We introduced NSL for fabrication of nanoplasmonic structures
including antenna arrays on rigid surfaces such as silicon, CaF2 and glass. In conclusion, Nanostencil Lithography
enables plasmonic substrates supporting spectrally narrow far-field resonances with enhanced near-field intensities
which are very useful for vibrational spectroscopy. We believe this nanofabrication scheme, enabling the reusability of
stencil and offering flexibility on the substrate choice and nano-pattern design could significantly enhance wide-use of
plasmonics in sensing technologies.
Paper Details
Date Published: 13 May 2011
PDF: 5 pages
Proc. SPIE 8031, Micro- and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications III, 80312U (13 May 2011); doi: 10.1117/12.884105
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8031:
Micro- and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications III
Thomas George; M. Saif Islam; Achyut K. Dutta, Editor(s)
PDF: 5 pages
Proc. SPIE 8031, Micro- and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications III, 80312U (13 May 2011); doi: 10.1117/12.884105
Show Author Affiliations
Serap Aksu, Boston Univ. (United States)
Ahmet A. Yanik, Boston Univ. (United States)
Ronen Adato, Boston Univ. (United States)
Ahmet A. Yanik, Boston Univ. (United States)
Ronen Adato, Boston Univ. (United States)
Alp Artar, Boston Univ. (United States)
Min Huang, Boston Univ. (United States)
Hatice Altug, Boston Univ. (United States)
Min Huang, Boston Univ. (United States)
Hatice Altug, Boston Univ. (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8031:
Micro- and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications III
Thomas George; M. Saif Islam; Achyut K. Dutta, Editor(s)
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