Tailoring Mie Resonances in Cupric Oxide Particles for Use as Nanoantennas
Sundaram Bhardwaj Ramakrishnan (1), Ravi Teja Addanki Tirumala (1),, Farshid Mohammadparast (1), Swetha M. Arumugam (2), Marimuthu Andiappan ((1), School of Chemical Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK,, USA. (2) Department of Chemistry

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that submicron cupric oxide particles can exhibit tunable electric and magnetic Mie resonances, offering a promising, low-loss alternative to traditional plasmonic nanoparticles for various nano-optics applications.
Contribution
It introduces a synthesis method for shape- and size-controlled CuO particles that exhibit strong, tunable Mie resonances, expanding the potential for practical nano-optics applications.
Findings
CuO particles show size- and shape-dependent Mie resonances.
Resonance wavelengths can be tuned from visible to near-infrared.
CuO particles have comparable or superior scattering to plasmonic nanoparticles.
Abstract
The field of nano-optics has grown with plasmonic metals. Metals such as silver, gold, and copper nanoparticles, can concentrate electromagnetic (EM) fields at the nanoscale, due to the special property called localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). This laid the foundation for a wide range of applications, including nanoscale optics, solar energy harvesting, photocatalysis, and biosensing. However, there are inherent problems associated with plasmonic metals, such as high heating losses, and their inability to be scaled-up like semiconductor fabrication processes. In addition, the field enhancement is restricted only to electric fields. All together these inhibit the broader use of PMNs in practical applications. In this work, we report submicron cupric oxide (CuO) particles with a medium refractive index that can exhibit strong electric and magnetic Mie resonances with strong…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and Applications · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Copper-based nanomaterials and applications
