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Dive into the research topics where Lucas V. Besteiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucas V. Besteiro.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Anomalous ultrafast dynamics of hot plasmonic electrons in nanostructures with hot spots

Hayk Harutyunyan; Alex B. F. Martinson; Daniel Rosenmann; Larousse Khosravi Khorashad; Lucas V. Besteiro; Alexander O. Govorov; Gary P. Wiederrecht

The interaction of light and matter in metallic nanosystems is mediated by the collective oscillation of surface electrons, called plasmons. After excitation, plasmons are absorbed by the metal electrons through inter- and intraband transitions, creating a highly non-thermal distribution of electrons. The electron population then decays through electron-electron interactions, creating a hot electron distribution within a few hundred femtoseconds, followed by a further relaxation via electron-phonon scattering on the timescale of a few picoseconds. In the spectral domain, hot plasmonic electrons induce changes to the plasmonic resonance of the nanostructure by modifying the dielectric constant of the metal. Here, we report on the observation of anomalously strong changes to the ultrafast temporal and spectral responses of these excited hot plasmonic electrons in hybrid metal/oxide nanostructures as a result of varying the geometry and composition of the nanostructure and the excitation wavelength. In particular, we show a large ultrafast, pulsewidth-limited contribution to the excited electron decay signal in hybrid nanostructures containing hot spots. The intensity of this contribution correlates with the efficiency of the generation of highly excited surface electrons. Using theoretical models, we attribute this effect to the generation of hot plasmonic electrons from hot spots. We then develop general principles to enhance the generation of energetic electrons through specifically designed plasmonic nanostructures that could be used in applications where hot electron generation is beneficial, such as in solar photocatalysis, photodetectors and nonlinear devices.


Nature Communications | 2015

Circularly polarized light detection with hot electrons in chiral plasmonic metamaterials

Wei Li; Zachary J. Coppens; Lucas V. Besteiro; Wenyi Wang; Alexander O. Govorov; Jason Valentine

Circularly polarized light is utilized in various optical techniques and devices. However, using conventional optical systems to generate, analyse and detect circularly polarized light involves multiple optical elements, making it challenging to realize miniature and integrated devices. While a number of ultracompact optical elements for manipulating circularly polarized light have recently been demonstrated, the development of an efficient and highly selective circularly polarized light photodetector remains challenging. Here we report on an ultracompact circularly polarized light detector that combines large engineered chirality, realized using chiral plasmonic metamaterials, with hot electron injection. We demonstrate the detectors ability to distinguish between left and right hand circularly polarized light without the use of additional optical elements. Implementation of this photodetector could lead to enhanced security in fibre and free-space communication, as well as emission, imaging and sensing applications for circularly polarized light using a highly integrated photonic platform.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Localization of Excess Temperature Using Plasmonic Hot Spots in Metal Nanostructures: Combining Nano-Optical Antennas with the Fano Effect

Larousse Khosravi Khorashad; Lucas V. Besteiro; Zhiming Wang; Jason Valentine; Alexander O. Govorov

It is challenging to strongly localize temperature in small volumes because heat transfer is a diffusive process. Here we show how to overcome this limitation using electrodynamic hot spots and interference effects in the regime of continuous-wave (CW) excitation. We introduce a set of figures of merit for the localization of excess temperature and for the efficiency of the plasmonic photothermal effect. Our calculations show that the local temperature distribution in a trimer nanoparticle assembly is a complex function of the geometry and sizes. Large nanoparticles in the trimer play the role of the nano-optical antenna, whereas the small nanoparticle in the plasmonic hot spot acts as a nanoheater. Under the specific conditions, the temperature increase inside a nanoparticle trimer can be localized in a hot spot region at the small heater nanoparticle and, in this way, a thermal hot spot can be realized. However, the overall power efficiency of local heating in this trimer is much smaller than that of a ...


Nature Physics | 2017

Hotspot-mediated non-dissipative and ultrafast plasmon passage

Eva-Maria Roller; Lucas V. Besteiro; Claudia Pupp; Larousse Khosravi Khorashad; Alexander O. Govorov; Tim Liedl

Plasmonic nanoparticles hold great promise as photon handling elements and as channels for coherent transfer of energy and information in future all-optical computing devices.1–5 Coherent energy oscillations between two spatially separated plasmonic entities via a virtual middle state exemplify electron-based population transfer, but their realization requires precise nanoscale positioning of heterogeneous particles.6–10 Here, we show the assembly and optical analysis of a triple particle system consisting of two gold nanoparticles with an inter-spaced silver island. We observe strong plasmonic coupling between the spatially separated gold particles mediated by the connecting silver particle with almost no dissipation of energy. As the excitation energy of the silver island exceeds that of the gold particles, only quasi-occupation of the silver transfer channel is possible. We describe this effect both with exact classical electrodynamic modeling and qualitative quantum-mechanical calculations. We identify the formation of strong hot spots between all particles as the main mechanism for the loss-less coupling and thus coherent ultra-fast energy transfer between the remote partners. Our findings could prove useful for quantum gate operations, but also for classical charge and information transfer processes.


Small | 2018

Highly Efficient Copper Sulfide-Based Near-Infrared Photothermal Agents: Exploring the Limits of Macroscopic Heat Conversion

Riccardo Marin; Artiom Skripka; Lucas V. Besteiro; Antonio Benayas; Zhiming Wang; Alexander O. Govorov; Patrizia Canton; Fiorenzo Vetrone

Among the foreseeable therapeutic approaches at the cellular level, nanoplatform-driven photothermal therapy is a thriving tool for the selective eradication of malignant tissues with minimal side effects to healthy ones. Hence, chemically versatile, near-infrared absorbing plasmonic nanoparticles are distinctly appealing and most sought after as efficient photothermal agents. In this work, a straightforward method to synthesize monodisperse PEGylated copper sulfide nanoparticles of pure covellite (CuS) phase, featuring strong localized surface plasmonic resonance absorption in the near-infrared and flexible surface chemistry, imparted by monomethyl ether polyethylene glycol molecules, is developed and optimized. These nanoparticles show a remarkable photothermal heat conversion efficiency (HCE) of 71.4%, which is among the highest for CuS systems and rivals that of plasmonic noble metal nanostructures. Moreover, through critical evaluation and mathematical modeling of the materials properties and measurement methodology, it is assessed that the calculated HCE values drastically depend on experimental conditions such as wavelength-dependent solvent absorption properties, sol concentration, and optical path. These findings are of paramount relevance to the photothermal community, since they call for a standardization of the procedure for the evaluation of the HCE of proposed photothermal agents, in order to make the reported values universally and reliably comparable.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Plasmonic Chirality and Circular Dichroism in Bioassembled and Nonbiological Systems: Theoretical Background and Recent Progress

Xiang-Tian Kong; Lucas V. Besteiro; Zhiming Wang; Alexander O. Govorov

Nature is chiral, thus chirality is a key concept required to understand a multitude of systems in physics, chemistry, and biology. The field of optics offers valuable tools to probe the chirality of nanosystems, including the measurement of circular dichroism, the differential interaction strength between matter and circularly polarized light with opposite helicity. Simultaneously, the use of plasmonic systems with giant light-interaction cross-sections opens new paths to investigate and manipulate systems on the nanoscale. Consequently, the interest in chiral plasmonic and hybrid systems has continually grown in recent years, due to their potential applications in biosensing, polarization-encoded optical communication, polarization-selective chemical reactions, and materials with polarization-dependent light-matter interaction. Experimentally, chiral properties of nanostructures can be either created artificially using modern fabrication techniques involving inorganic materials, or borrowed from nature using bioassembly or biomolecular templating. Herein, the recent progress in the field of plasmonic chirality is summarized, with a focus on both the theoretical background and the experimental advances in the study of chirality in various systems, including molecular-plasmonic assemblies, chiral plasmonic nanostructures, chiral assemblies of interacting plasmonic nanoparticles, and chiral metal metasurfaces and metamaterials. The growth prospects of this field are also discussed.


ACS Nano | 2018

Circular Dichroism of Chiral Molecules in DNA-Assembled Plasmonic Hotspots

Luisa M. Kneer; Eva-Maria Roller; Lucas V. Besteiro; Robert Schreiber; Alexander O. Govorov; Tim Liedl

The chiral state of a molecule plays a crucial role in molecular recognition and biochemical reactions. Because of this and owing to the fact that most modern drugs are chiral, the sensitive and reliable detection of the chirality of molecules is of great interest to drug development. The majority of naturally occurring biomolecules exhibit circular dichroism (CD) in the UV range. Theoretical studies and several experiments have demonstrated that this UV-CD can be transferred into the plasmonic frequency domain when metal surfaces and chiral biomolecules are in close proximity. Here, we demonstrate that the CD transfer effect can be drastically enhanced by placing chiral molecules, here double-stranded DNA, inside a plasmonic hotspot. By using different particle types (gold, silver, spheres, and rods) and by exploiting the versatility of DNA origami, we were able to systematically study the impact of varying particle distances on the CD transfer efficiency and to demonstrate CD transfer over the whole optical spectrum down to the near-infrared. For this purpose, nanorods were also placed upright on DNA origami sheets, forming strong optical antennas. Theoretical models, demonstrating the intricate relationships between molecular chirality and achiral electric fields, support our experimental findings. From both experimental measurements and theoretical considerations, we conclude that the transferred CD is most intensive for systems with strong plasmonic hotspots, as we find them in relatively small gaps (5-12 nm) between spherical nanoparticles and preferably between the tips of nanorods.


Advanced Optical Materials | 2017

Broadband Hot-Electron Collection for Solar Water Splitting with Plasmonic Titanium Nitride

Alberto Naldoni; Urcan Guler; Zhuoxian Wang; Marcello Marelli; Francesco Malara; Xiangeng Meng; Lucas V. Besteiro; Alexander O. Govorov; Alexander V. Kildishev; Alexandra Boltasseva; Vladimir M. Shalaev


ACS energy letters | 2017

What’s so Hot about Electrons in Metal Nanoparticles?

Gregory V. Hartland; Lucas V. Besteiro; Paul Johns; Alexander O. Govorov


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Amplified Generation of Hot Electrons and Quantum Surface Effects in Nanoparticle Dimers with Plasmonic Hot Spots

Lucas V. Besteiro; Alexander O. Govorov

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Zhiming Wang

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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James R. Chelikowsky

University of Texas at Austin

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L. J. Gallego

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Luis Tortajada

University of Santiago de Compostela

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