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Proximity of the metal nanoparticles enhance the plasmonic coupling and shifts the resonance. This article presents a numerical study of the photothermal effect in aggregates of small gold nanorods considering the ordered as well as random aggregates. In the ordered aggregates, there is lateral coupling which causes blueshifts in the plasmonic resonance, while in the random aggregates there are redshifts in the plasmonic resonance. The plasmon response of latter could be tailored up to the second infrared biological therapeutic window. It has been observed that the aggregates show higher absorption power and therefore, higher temperature rise compared to the single gold nanorod or monodispersive nanorods. The absorption resonance peak position of the random aggregate depends on the incident and polarization angles of the incident light. The aggregation of the nanoparticles often inherently occurs in the biological medium which affects the photothermal process. This study helps to understand the photothermal heating of nanoparticle aggregates and the use of the optimal light source concerning the absorption peak of the aggregates suspension for therapeutic uses.
Several fields of applications require a reliable characterization of the photothermal response and heat dissipation of nanoscopic systems, which remains a challenging task both for modeling and experimental measurements. Here, we present a new imple
Illuminated gapped-gold-nanorod dimers hold surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) that can be engineered, by an appropriate choice of geometrical parameters, to enhance the electromagnetic field at the gap, allowing applications in molecular detection vi
Over the last decade, single-molecule optical microscopy has become the gold-standard approach to decipher complex molecular processes in cellular environments. [1-3] Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy has several advantages such as ease of appl
Brownian microparticles diffusing in optical potential energy landscapes constitute a generic testbed for nonequilibrium statistical thermodynamics and has been used to emulate a wide variety of physical systems, ranging from Josephson junctions to S
We study the mechanical stability of a tunable high-finesse microcavity under ambient conditions and investigate light-induced effects that can both suppress and excite mechanical fluctuations. As an enabling step, we demonstrate the ultra-precise el