Microscale Thermophoresis in Liquids Induced by Plasmonic Heating and Characterized by Phase and Fluorescence Microscopies
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 2021-09-22, vol. 125, n° 39, p. 21533
American Chemical Society
Résumé en anglais
Thermophoresis denotes the motion of particles along temperature gradients. Insignificant in most daily-life observations, this peculiar effect can become dominant in applications involving nano-and microscale heating in ...Lire la suite >
Thermophoresis denotes the motion of particles along temperature gradients. Insignificant in most daily-life observations, this peculiar effect can become dominant in applications involving nano-and microscale heating in fluids. Recent studies in nanoplasmonics observed significant thermophoresis of molecules and particles, in particular in plasmonic trapping, SERS, and biosensing. Evidencing the presence of thermophoresis is not obvious and quantifying its magnitude is even less accessible considering existing techniques. In this article, we introduce a method capable of quantifying the thermophoresis of particles in the context of nanoplasmonic applications. A gold nanoparticle array under illumination is used to create microscale temperature gradients, and a dual fluorescence-phase microscopy technique is used to map both temperature and concentration in parallel. This association enables the determination of Soret coefficients for a wide range of temperatures from a single image acquisition. This metrology technique paves the way for broader fundamental research in microscale thermophoresis in liquids and better-controlled applications in nanophotonics involving thermoplasmonic effects.< Réduire
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