In Situ Growth of Au-Ag Bimetallic Nanorings on Optical Fibers for Enhanced Plasmonic Sensing

2020 
Highly functionalized materials at the nanoscale on optical fibers offer notable opportunities to construct “lab-on-fiber” functional devices with unusual properties. However, it is extremely difficult to fabricate nanostructures with special morphology on the thin cylindrical optical fiber surface for the commonly used physical lithography techniques. Meanwhile, it is vital to remain the plasmon property of Ag-riched particles while improving their stability. Herein, we design a facile strategy for the fabrication of Au-Ag bimetallic nanorings (Au-Ag NRs) immobilized on optical fibers for enhanced plasmon property. Ag NPs are first grown in situ on the optical fiber surface through the chelating and redox of polydopamine (PDA) to metal ions, and then are quickly converted into Au-Ag NRs by a galvanic replacement reaction and metal deposition. This conversion only takes 3.5 min, while the formed Au-Ag NRs exhibit outstanding localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) sensitivity (2204 nm/RIU) and oxidation resistance, and Au and Ag atoms are distributed uniformly in the nanorings. Furthermore, a novel and interesting formation process of the nanorings including deformation, spallation, growth in the gaps, and ring formation is studied. These findings provide a way to grow bimetallic nanorings on optical fibers, which are promising candidates for photoelectric “lab-on-fiber” devices.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    45
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []