Issue 1, 2025

Lasing in an assembled array of silver nanocubes

Abstract

We demonstrate a surface lattice resonance (SLR)-based plasmonic nanolaser that leverages bulk production of colloidal nanoparticles and assembly on templates with single particle resolution. SLRs emerge from the hybridization of the plasmonic and photonic modes when nanoparticles are arranged into periodic arrays and this can provide feedback for stimulated emission. It has been shown that perfect arrays are not a strict prerequisite for producing lasing. Here, we propose using high-quality colloids instead. Silver colloidal nanocubes feature excellent plasmonic properties due to their single-crystal nature and low facet roughness. We use capillarity-assisted nanoparticle assembly to produce substrates featuring SLR and comprising single nanocubes. Combined with the laser dye pyrromethene-597, the nanocube array lases at 574 nm with <1.2 nm linewidth, <100 μJ cm−2 lasing threshold, and produces a beam with <1 mrad divergence, despite less-than-perfect arrangement. Such plasmonic nanolasers can be produced on a large-scale and integrated in point-of-care diagnostics, photonic integrated circuits, and optical communications applications.

Graphical abstract: Lasing in an assembled array of silver nanocubes

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Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
06 Jun 2024
Accepted
21 Oct 2024
First published
22 Oct 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Horiz., 2025,10, 142-149

Lasing in an assembled array of silver nanocubes

M. Juodėnas, N. Khinevich, G. Klyvis, J. Henzie, T. Tamulevičius and S. Tamulevičius, Nanoscale Horiz., 2025, 10, 142 DOI: 10.1039/D4NH00263F

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