https://doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2004-00222-x
Surface plasmon resonance in nanocrystalline silver in a ZnO matrix
1
Department of Materials Science,
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science,
Calcutta-700 032, India
2
St. Xavier's College, 30 Park Street, Calcutta-700 016, India
Corresponding author: a msakp@iacs.res.in
Received:
23
October
2003
Published online:
23
July
2004
Silver nanoparticles embedded in ZnO matrix were deposited onto fused silica
substrates using high pressure (40 Pa) d.c. sputtering techniques.
The particle size in the films was tailored by varying the system pressure
and substrate temperature, while the metal volume fraction was controlled by
adjusting the relative time of sputtering of the targets. Blue-shift of the
surface plasmon resonance peak was observed with the reduction in size and
volume fraction of metal particles. A surface plasmon peak in the absorption
spectra was found to be absent in the films with particle size and metal
concentration below a critical value. A sharp absorption edge in the
absorbance spectra within the UV-VIS range indicated semiconducting behavior
of the ultrafine silver particles. Films deposited at lower substrate
temperature showed a narrow distribution of nanoparticles, nearly spherical
in shape. Increase in substrate temperature resulted in a non-uniform size
and shape in the films due to the agglomeration of the nanoparticles. These
size and shape distributions have a profound effect on the optical
absorbance spectra and result in a broad and asymmetric surface plasmon
band. A shape distribution introduced in the Maxwell-Garnett or Bruggeman
effective medium theory was found to give a reasonable description of the
experimentally observed optical absorption spectra.
PACS: 78.67.-n – Optical properties of low-dimensional, mesoscopic, and nanoscale materials and structures / 78.67.Bf – Nanocrystals and nanoparticles
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica, Springer-Verlag, 2004