Plasmonic crystals with highly ordered lattice geometries using continuous metal films on diatom bio-silica as both scaffolds and sources of tuneability
William P. Wardley, Johannes W. Goessling, Martin Lopez-Garcia

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that diatom frustules can serve as natural, highly ordered scaffolds for plasmonic crystals with tunable optical properties, offering a bio-inspired alternative to traditional fabrication methods.
Contribution
The paper introduces the novel use of diatom girdles as natural scaffolds for plasmonic crystals with continuous metal films, enabling new plasmonic effects and tunability.
Findings
Diatom girdles form well-ordered square and hexagonal lattices.
Optical modeling confirms the dispersions and electric field enhancements.
Girdles outperform conventional fabrication in certain plasmonic applications.
Abstract
Diatoms are microscopic algae found in all of Earths water courses. They produce frustules, porous silica exoskeletons, grown by precipitation of silicic acid from water. Frustule components, known as girdles, from some diatom species also feature highly periodic pore arrays with properties on the same scale and quality of ordering as manufactured photonic crystals. Here, the girdles of two diatom species with various lattice constants are used as bio-silica scaffolds for plasmonic crystals, combined with metals chosen for spectral agreement between permittivity and photonic crystal properties. The use of frustules as scaffolds for plasmonic application has been tested earlier, as nano-porous features can enhance scattering and local hotspots, useful for sensing application or SERS. However, both the use of girdles and of continuous metal films are new approaches offering previously…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiatoms and Algae Research
