Revisiting the plasmon radiation damping of gold nanorods†
Abstract
Noble metal nanoparticles have been utilized for a vast amount of optical applications. For applications that use metal nanoparticles as nanosensors and for optical labeling, higher radiative efficiency is preferred. To get a deeper knowledge about the radiation damping of noble metal nanoparticles, we used gold nanorods with different geometry factors (aspect ratios) as the model system to study. We investigated theoretically how the radiation damping of a nanorod depends on the material, and shape of the particle. Surprisingly, a simple analytical equation describes radiation damping very accurately and allows the disentanglement of the maximal radiation damping parameter for gold nanorods with resonance energy Eres around 1.81 eV (685 nm). We found very good agreement with theoretical predictions and experimental data obtained by single-particle spectroscopy. Our results and approaches may pave the way for designing and optimizing gold nanostructures with higher optical signal and better sensing performance.