Determining Concentration of Nanoparticles From Ellipsometry
Marshall Space Flight Center
Saturday, November 01 2008
Counting of particles is not necessary.
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A method of using ellipsometry or polarization analysis of light
in total internal reflection of a surface to determine the number
density of gold nanoparticles on a smooth substrate has been
developed. The method can be modified to enable determination
of densities of sparse distributions of nanoparticles in general,
and is expected to be especially useful for measuring gold-nanoparticle-labeled biomolecules on microarrays.
Real and Imaginary Parts of complex dielectric functions were determined for bulk gold and for gold nanoparticles having various diameters.
The method is based on theoretical calculations of the ellipsometric
responses of gold nanoparticles. Elements of the calculations
include the following:
For simplicity, the gold nanoparticles are assumed to be
spherical and to have the same radius.
The distribution of gold nanoparticles is assumed to be a sub-monolayer
(that is, sparser than a monolayer).
The optical response of the sub-monolayer is modeled by use of
a thin-island-film theory, according to which the polarizabilities
parallel and perpendicular to the substrate are functions of the
wavelength of light, the dielectric functions (permittivities
expressed as complex functions of frequency or wavelength) of
the gold and the suspending medium (in this case, the suspending
medium is air), the fraction of the substrate area covered
by the nanoparticles, and the radius of the nanoparticles.
For the purpose of the thin-island-film theory, the dielectric
function of the gold nanoparticles is modeled as the known
dielectric function of bulk gold plus a correction term that is
necessitated by the fact that the mean free path length for
electrons in gold decreases with decreasing radius, in such a
manner as to cause the imaginary part of the dielectric function
to increase with decreasing radius (see figure). The correction
term is a function of the nanoparticle radius, the
wavelength of light, the mean free path and the Fermi speed
of electrons in bulk gold, the plasma frequency of gold, and
the speed of light in a vacuum.
These models are used to calculate ellipsometric responses
for various concentrations of gold nanoparticles having an
assumed radius. The modeled data indicates distinct spectral
features for both the real and the imaginary part of the dielectric
function. An ellipsometric measurement would determine
this distinct feature and thus can be used to measure nanoparticle
concentration. By “ellipsometric responses” is meant the
intensities of light measured in various polarization states as
functions of the angle of incidence and the polarization states
of the incident light. These calculated ellipsometric responses
are used as calibration curves: Data from subsequent ellipsometric
measurements on real specimens are compared with
the calibration curves. The concentration of the nanoparticles
on a specimen is assumed to be that of the calibration curve
that most closely matches the data pertaining to that specimen.
This work was done by Srivatsa Venkatasubbarao and Lothar U
Kempen of Intelligent Optical Systems, Inc. and Russell Chipman of
the University of Arizona for Marshall Space Flight Center. For further
information, contact Sammy Nabors, MSFC Commercialization
Assistance Lead, at
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. MFS-32506-1