A mathematical model for the calculation of the optical and thermal properties of an ensemble of gold nanostars with different tip lengths L = 10 to 20 nm in an aqueous environment is proposed. The heating of a nanoparticle ensemble under irradiation by a laser pulse of a nanosecond duration: resonant λ = 808 nm and nonresonant λ = 1064 nm is studied. A significant blue shift of surface plasmon resonance during the formation of a vapor bubble around the nanoparticle was detected and described. Based on the analysis of the kinetics of nanoparticle heating under the action of a laser pulse before and after the formation of a vapor bubble, a theoretical description of the experimentally observed threshold nature of particle photomodification is given. It was found that the laser intensity Im necessary to achieve the melting temperature Tm (photomodification threshold) tends to increase with decreasing nanostar tip length and for an individual nanostar differs by an order of magnitude. However, up to 45% of the nanoparticles are heated to the melting temperature Tm by a single pulse with an intensity only 2.5 times higher than the minimum value of Im. At a wavelength of 1064 nm, Im is ∼6 times higher than at a wavelength of 808 nm. |
ACCESS THE FULL ARTICLE
No SPIE Account? Create one
CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
Pulsed laser operation
Gold
Absorption
Nanoparticles
Plasmonics
Laser damage threshold
Numerical modeling