Plasmonic Aerosols
Jeffrey Geldmeier, Paul Johns, Nicholas J. Greybush, Jawad Naciri and, Jake Fontana

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the creation of plasmonic aerosols by transitioning gold nanorods into the gas phase, showing their optical stability and tunability, with potential applications in sensing and geoengineering.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of plasmonic aerosols, experimentally demonstrating their stability, tunability, and sensitivity, expanding plasmonic applications beyond liquids and solids.
Findings
Aerosols are optically homogeneous and thermodynamically stable.
The absorbance peak is tunable from visible to mid-infrared wavelengths.
Sensitivity to refractive index changes increases with nanorod aspect ratio.
Abstract
Plasmonic nanoparticles resonantly couple to and confine light below the diffraction limit. This mechanism has enabled a modern renaissance in optical materials, with potential applications ranging from sensing and circuitry to renewable energies and medicines. However, these plasmonic materials are typically constrained to dilute liquids or solid two-dimensional surfaces, thereby limiting their possibilities. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a plasmonic aerosol by transitioning liquid suspensions of gold nanorods into the gas phase and simultaneously measuring their optical spectra. By measuring and modeling the evolution of the longitudinal absorbance peak of the nanorods from the liquid to the gas phase, we find that the aerosols are optically homogeneous and thermodynamically stable. We show that by tailoring the aspect ratio of the nanorods, the aerosol absorbance peak is…
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