Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7128248 | Optics & Laser Technology | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Pulsed laser ablation of copper in distilled water is used to synthesize copper nanoparticles as a function of duration of laser ablation and incident laser energy. Increase in the ablation time from 15 to 60â¯min at fixed incident laser energy of 30â¯mJ resulted in blue shift of the surface plasmon resonance peak from 641 to 626â¯nm along with a broadening of the plasmon bandwidth from 127 to 165â¯nm, respectively. The increase in incident laser energy from 30 to 70â¯mJ at fixed duration of 60â¯min ablation induced a similar blue shift in the plasmon peak from 626 to 617â¯nm and a corresponding increase in the bandwidth from 165 to 209â¯nm, respectively. These observations are due to reduction in the size of the nanoparticles as also confirmed by the transmission electron microscopic images. Nearly uniform particle size distribution is observed for an ablation time of 60â¯min. An increase in laser energy from 30 to 70â¯mJ keeping the ablation time fixed for 60â¯min resulted in decrease in the average size of the nanoparticles from 20 to 7â¯nm, respectively. The structural studies via selected area electron diffraction and Raman analysis revealed that the extent of oxidation taking place in the synthesized nanoparticles of Cu@CuxO also varies with the laser ablation duration and incident laser energy. For the samples prepared with 30â¯mJ of incident laser energy and laser ablation duration upto 30â¯min, Cu2O phase of the nanoparticles is dominant whereas for an increased duration of 60â¯min at the same laser energy, there is an appearance of CuO phase. The increase in laser energy upto 70â¯mJ for 60â¯min of ablation duration resulted in CuO as the dominating phase. It has been established that by merely varying the laser ablation duration and the incident energy, particle size, plasmonic response and structural properties of the synthesized nanoparticles can be effectively tuned.
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Authors
Prahlad K. Baruah, Ashwini K. Sharma, Alika Khare,