MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL08.08.04 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Nonlinear Optical Colloidal Three-Dimensional Metacrystals

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
9:00am - 9:15am

Room 340/341, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Ye Zhang1,Chad Mirkin1

Northwestern University1

Abstract

Ye Zhang1,Chad Mirkin1

Northwestern University1
Atomic and molecular structure inversion symmetry breaking in naturally occurring crystals dictate their physical properties including nonlinear optical effects, piezo-/ferroelectricity, and nonreciprocal charge transport behavior. With metamaterials composed of nanoscale building blocks (<i>i.e.</i>, meta-atoms), the spatial inversion symmetry violation on planar surfaces leads to spin-controlled photonics as well as nonlinear optical metasurfaces. While low-symmetry three dimensional (3D) metacrystals can be synthesized, limitations in long-range order and control over resulting symmetries inhibits the investigation of the symmetry-property relationships in these systems. Here we present a DNA-mediated gold nanoparticle assembly approach to create 3D colloidal crystals which can be designed to deliberately access high- or low-symmetry phases. By manipulating particle shape, size, and DNA design, we effectively tune the crystal symmetries of the superlattices in a controllable manner. Access to these different symmetries and facile transitions among them enable us to explore the symmetry-dictated functionalities of these colloidal crystals. Further, we investigate how the resulting crystal symmetry relates to their nonlinear optical interactions and identify that the non-centrosymmetric crystal functions as an effective nonlinear optical metacrystal, where second harmonic generation (SHG) arises from the asymmetrical distribution of the local electric field around the close-packed plasmonic nanoparticles. Moreover, this non-centrosymmetric colloidal metacrystal represents the first 3D nonlinear optical metamaterial developed through a bottom-up approach and exhibits a high maximum SHG conversion efficiency, notably surpassing the efficiencies observed in the majority of plasmonic 2D metasurfaces by two orders of magnitude.

Keywords

optical properties | self-assembly

Symposium Organizers

Yao-Wei Huang, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Min Seok Jang, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Ho Wai (Howard) Lee, University of California, Irvine
Pin Chieh Wu, National Cheng Kung University

Symposium Support

Bronze
APL Quantum
Kao Duen Technology Corporation
Nanophotonics Journal

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature