Cong-Cong
Zhang
a,
Jia-Yi
Zhang
a,
Jing-Ru
Feng
a,
Si-Ting
Liu
a,
Si-Jing
Ding
*a,
Liang
Ma
*b and
Qu-Quan
Wang
*c
aSchool of Mathematics and Physics, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), Wuhan 430074, P. R. China. E-mail: dingsijing@cug.edu.cn
bHubei Key Laboratory of Optical Information and Pattern Recognition, Wuhan Institute of Technology, Wuhan 430205, P. R. China. E-mail: maliang@wit.edu.cn
cSchool of Science, Department of Physics, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, P. R. China. E-mail: qqwang@sustech.edu.cn
First published on 21st February 2024
As the most common nonlinear optical process, second harmonic generation (SHG) has important application value in the field of nanophotonics. With the rapid development of metal nanomaterial processing and chemical preparation technology, various structures based on metal nanoparticles have been used to achieve the enhancement and modulation of SHG. In the field of nonlinear optics, plasmonic metal nanostructures have become potential candidates for nonlinear optoelectronic devices because of their highly adjustable physical characteristics. In this article, first, the basic optical principles of SHG and the source of surface symmetry breaking in metal nanoparticles are briefly introduced. Next, the related reports on SHG in metal nanostructures are reviewed from three aspects: the enhancement of SHG efficiency by double resonance structures, the SHG effect based on magnetic resonance and the harmonic energy transfer. Then, the applications of SHG in the sensing, imaging and in situ monitoring of metal nanostructures are summarized. Future opportunities for SHG in composite systems composed of metal nanostructures and two-dimensional materials are also proposed.
Metal nanostructures have attracted much attention because of their unique electromagnetic plasmon resonance characteristics, which are closely related to their size and shape. Metal nanomaterials have been widely used in many fields, such as surface-enhanced Raman scattering,11–13 biochemical sensing,14–16 chemical catalysis,17 medicine,18,19 and nanophotonics.20,21 In recent years, the nonlinear effects of metal nanostructures at the subwavelength scale have received extensive attention.22,23 When light irradiates a metal nanostructure, the conduction electrons in the metal nanostructure will oscillate collectively to form surface plasmon resonance and generate a strong local electromagnetic field,24 which can enhance the weak nonlinear signal.25 By meticulously designing plasmonic metal nanostructures, we can also experimentally achieve the enhancement of SHG signals. Early SHG enhancement experiments with surface plasmons were carried out on an electrolytically roughened surface of bulk silver and the SHG enhancement was four orders of magnitude stronger than the SHG signal generated on a smooth silver surface.26 Moreover, small changes in the geometry of metal nanostructures also have a great impact on surface plasmons, and this sensitivity produces the SHG signals of metal nanostructures with good tunability.27–29 With further developments, researchers are constantly pursuing the lightness and portability of tools, and integrated optical circuits and integrated optical chips have become an urgent need.30 Because the size of traditional materials is mostly greater than 10 nm, the preparation of integrated nonlinear optical devices is difficult.31 The emergence of metal nanostructures effectively solves this problem and their extremely small size creates good conditions for designing devices with extremely small volumes. Therefore, studying nonlinear optical properties based on metal nanostructures is highly important for designing nonlinear optical devices. These advantages have led to widely studied and wide-ranging nonlinear optical effects on metal nanostructures.
This mini-review focuses on the research on SHG in metal nanostructures. First, the basic optical principles of SHG in metal nanostructures are briefly described. Second, the enhancement and modulation of second harmonic signals in metal nanostructures are reviewed from three aspects: double-resonance-enhanced SHG, magnetic-resonance-enhanced SHG and harmonic energy transfer-enhanced SHG. Third, the applications of SHG based on the metal nanostructure in sensing, imaging and in situ monitoring are discussed. Finally, future developments in the field of SHG are proposed.
Fig. 1 The mechanism of SHG and surface symmetry breaking in metal nanostructures. (a) Energy-level diagram describing SHG. (b) Comparison of SHG in bulk materials and nanoparticles. Adapted with permission from ref. 35. Copyright 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (c) Schematic diagram of symmetry breaking-induced nonlinear response on the surface of a gold sphere. (d) Calculation of the spatial distribution of nonlinear current and the near-field map of the corresponding harmonic field amplitude of a 150 nm gold nanoparticle. Adapted with permission from ref. 42. Copyright 2010 The American Physical Society. |
The optical response of a nonlinear medium can be determined by the electric polarization intensity P and the incident radiation field intensity E, and the total polarization intensity is usually expressed as follows:33
P = ε0[χ(1)E + χ(2)E2 + χ(3)E3 + …] |
Next, we explain the differences in the SHG signals between bulk materials and nanoparticles (see Fig. 1b). In bulk materials, appreciable SHG signals only appear when the generated SHG signals move through the material at the same speed as the incident photons, resulting in constructive interference.34 The constructive interference is a consequence of the phase-matching conditions of SHG. In contrast, due to the small diameter of nanoparticles relative to the wavelength of the incident light and the wavelength of the SHG signal, strict phase-matching conditions are not required to obtain a significant SHG signal.35 Due to their small size, the SHG signals generated anywhere in the material will always be in approximately the same phase, thus allowing scattering in multiple directions.36,37
Under the electric dipole approximation, there is no second-order nonlinear effect in a centrosymmetric medium. The atomic arrangement of common metals (for example, gold, silver, and copper) is centrosymmetric; thus, SHG will not exist under the electric dipole approximation. However, this statement is not consistent with the experimental results, especially when surface plasmon resonance occurs in metal nanostructures, and the SHG signal is clearly observed.38 This phenomenon actually occurs because the central symmetry at the interface of two centrally symmetric media is disrupted, resulting in the generation of a second harmonic signal in the interface layer.39,40 Using spherical gold nanoparticles in solution as an example, the nonlinear susceptibility χsurrounding medium in the solution environment is zero and the nonlinear susceptibility χparticle bulk inside the gold sphere is also zero; therefore, symmetry breaking occurs on the surface of the gold sphere, the nonlinear susceptibility χsurface on the surface of the gold sphere is no longer zero, and the SHG response can then be observed experimentally (see Fig. 1c). Wang et al. prepared rectangular subwavelength hole arrays with different shapes on a gold film on a glass substrate. Due to symmetry breaking, the atoms on the gold film surface have a nonzero second-order nonlinear susceptibility and the SHG signal could be observed under the excitation of an incident femtosecond pulsed laser. In contrast, the bulk atoms inside the gold film have no SHG response due to their central inversion symmetry.41 Their experimental results were consistent with those of other international research groups. With the finite element method, the spatial distributions of nonlinear currents on the surface and inside the bulk of 150 nm gold nanoparticles and the near-field distributions of the corresponding harmonic field amplitudes were theoretically simulated. The results also showed that the second harmonic signal on the surface of metal nanoparticles was much larger than the nonlinear signal caused by the field gradient inside the particles (see Fig. 1d).42 For plasmonic metal nanostructures, the component perpendicular to the surface has the largest proportion of surface nonlinear susceptibility; therefore, when exploring the surface nonlinear effect of metal nanostructures, only the nonlinear effect perpendicular to the surface was usually studied.43,44
In general, the signals of second-order nonlinear processes are not obvious in the centrosymmetric structures. The research results of Kauranen et al. confirmed that the key to improve SHG conversion efficiency lies in the non-centrosymmetric local field distributions caused by the asymmetric morphology of metal nanostructures.45 Therefore, researchers have designed various asymmetric metal nanostructures to obtain controllable local field distributions.46 These different metal nanostructures have different effects on the SHG enhancement. A few examples are given here. The SHG signal of a T-shaped dimer nanostructure composed of gold nanoparticles is generated by the asymmetric distribution of the local fundamental field. When the fundamental field is asymmetrically distributed around the perimeter of the nanodimer, the local surface susceptibility of the particle will generate a strong SHG signal.47 For G-shaped chiral nanostructures, structures with different orientations can produce different intensities of SHG for left and right circularly polarized light.48 A metamaterial consisting of a U-shaped split-ring resonator breaks the original symmetry of the array, thus allowing the nanostructure to generate SHG enhancement.49 The non-centrosymmetric effect caused by a subwavelength-size triangular nanoaperture on a metal thin film makes it exhibit a better SHG enhancement effect than a circular nanoaperture.50 The second harmonic response of a sharp metal tip is the strongest for incident light polarized along the tip axis, due to the lower symmetry of tip-shaped structures relative to spherical structures.51 Moreover, Chen et al. proposed a method to quantify the influence of local field effects on second-order nonlinear susceptibility using white-light supercontinuum signals, and quantitatively extracted the contribution of non-centrosymmetry in a cross-shaped Ag nanohole to second-order nonlinear susceptibility through the experimental data. The results show that the second-order nonlinear susceptibility increases with an increase in the asymmetry of local field distribution in metal nanostructures.52 The studies listed above point out new directions for improving the nonlinear conversion efficiency of metal nanostructures.
Different plasmonic metal nanostructures have different abilities to enhance SHG signals due to their different asymmetries. Here, the effective second-order nonlinear susceptibility and the nonlinear conversion efficiency achieved using several representative metal nanostructures in the process of enhancing the SHG effect have been summarized, which can provide a reference for relevant researchers. For the nanocup formed using a metal-capped hemispherical nanoparticle, its maximum conversion efficiency is 1.8 × 10−9 during the enhanced SHG process and its effective second-order susceptibility is 3.2 pm V−1.53 A multiresonant log-periodic nanostructure composed of polarization-independent three-arm trapezoidal silver nanoantennas can realize the SHG effect with a conversion efficiency of 1.25 × 10−9 and a maximum second-order susceptibility of 1.9 pm V−1.54 A plasmonic metal nanostructure with sub-5 nm “double gaps” formed by placing gold nanoparticles in the trenches of gold thin films can effectively enhance SHG emission. The conversion efficiency of this system is 1.8 × 10−7 and its effective second-order susceptibility is 6.1 pm V−1.55 A metal–dielectric–metal nanostructure assembled using gold nanoparticles and a porous anodic alumina template has superior nonlinear conversion performance and its second harmonic conversion efficiency and effective second-order nonlinear susceptibility are 3.84 × 10−9 and 140 pm V−1, respectively.56 A planar 4π Archimedean nanospiral array structure with subwavelength dimensions can generate second harmonic light from any polarization state due to its inherent lack of symmetry. The maximum SHG conversion efficiency and effective second-order nonlinear susceptibility of this nanostructure are 1.3 × 10−8 and 15.3 pm V−1, respectively.57 The second-order susceptibility of different nanostructures listed above is in the same order of magnitude as that provided by widely used nonlinear crystals, which proves that these metal nanostructures can enhance SHG signals well.
For metal nanostructures, when light is incident on the metal surface, it will lead to an interaction between free electrons on the metal surface and the incident electromagnetic field, which will produce a clear field enhancement on the metal surface and lead to the surface plasmon resonance phenomenon.63,64 In the early study of classical nonlinear optical and hydrodynamic models, the SHG signal of the sample was nonlinearly enhanced with an increase in the amplitude of the fundamental frequency electric field. Therefore, excitation of the surface plasmon resonance in the metal nanostructures can improve the efficiency of SHG conversion;65–67 this is a simple way to enhance the nonlinear response strength of SHG. The advantage of enhancing nonlinear optics by the surface plasmon resonance effect of metal nanostructures is that the resonance size of the sample is small and consequently the phase matching conditions can be disregarded. This approach relies mainly on the unique electromagnetic resonance characteristics of surface plasmon resonance to enhance the nonlinear effect.68 Metzger et al. focused a pulsed laser on an aluminum nanoantenna array to excite the surface plasmon resonance of a structure and achieved more than an order of magnitude enhancement in the SHG conversion efficiency.69 The increase in the intensity of SHG due to this regulation method was very limited. In this study, the enhancement of the fundamental frequency field is only used to improve the SHG conversion efficiency. If the resonance enhancement of the fundamental frequency and doubled frequency fields can be excited at the same time in double resonance mode,70 the SHG conversion efficiency will be further enhanced. The principle of double resonance matching to enhance SHG is that the fundamental frequency mode increases the electric field intensity to amplify the SHG signal and then the amplified SHG signal is efficiently radiated outwards in frequency-doubling mode. Martin et al. designed an aluminum nanoantenna composed of three arms to achieve double resonance at the fundamental frequency and second harmonic frequency. They combined the surface integral equation (SIE) method with sensitive nonlinear optical experiments to verify that when quadrupole and dipole modes were coupled at the second harmonic wavelength; the SHG signal strength of the double resonance structure was greatly enhanced compared with that of a simple dipolar nanoantenna, which only supported the fundamental wavelength resonance. This detailed study on the enhancement mechanism of SHG in double resonance plasmonic nanoantennas has important guiding significance for the design of different nanostructures to enhance the strength of SHG (see Fig. 2a).71 Li et al. prepared Au nanodumbbells (NDs) with enlarged ends by a wet-chemical method and Au NDs were prepared with homogeneous and tunable end sizes. The transverse surface plasmon resonance and near-field enhancement were greatly improved at both ends of the end-enlarged Au NDs. When the end size of the Au NDs was adjusted to a certain size, the near-field enhancement of the fundamental and double frequencies could reach the maximum at the same time and then the Au NDs exhibited a double resonantly enhanced SHG signal, which was 10.3 times greater than the SHG signal of the Au nanorods (NRs) (see Fig. 2b).72 Ai et al. coated an Au nano-bipyramid grown by the seed-mediated method on the surface of an optical fiber and then adjusted the diameter of the optical fiber by flame heating to achieve the highest quality factor (Q ≈ 160). When the high-order fiber cavity mode resonated with the second harmonic wavelength, the fundamental wave light and the second harmonic light will propagated coherently in the fiber cavity dozens of times. Therefore, this doubly resonant plasmon-fiber system could achieve an ultrahigh SHG conversion efficiency. This work has improved the practical application value of plasmon-enhanced SHG nonlinear optical devices based on metal nanostructures (see Fig. 2c).73 Wu et al. prepared large-area arrays of ball-in-bowl plasmonic nanostructures by assembling gold nanoparticles with porous anodic alumina templates using a solution-processing approach, which supported two resonance modes in the visible and near-infrared regions. The gap geometry of the ball-in-bowl nanostructures enlarged the size of the gap cavity and achieved a wide-angle response to polarization-independent SHG radiation (see Fig. 2d).56 Park et al. designed metal bowtie nano-apertures (BNAs) as a 4 × 4 square periodic array by ion beam etching. The plasmonic resonance of this array structure at the fundamental wave could cause local field enhancement and its Fabry–Pérot resonance could promote the efficient transmission of the second harmonic signal. An SHG conversion efficiency of 1.4 × 10−8 was achieved in the experiment. Combined with the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulation, the SHG response enhancement of the doubly resonant structure was one order of magnitude greater than that without second harmonic resonance (see Fig. 2e).74
Fig. 2 SHG enhancement based on a double resonance structure. (a) Aluminum double resonant nanoantenna composed of three arms and its second harmonic signal enhancement principle. Adapted with permission from ref. 71. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society. (b) Double resonance structure of Au NDs with enlarged ends. Adapted with permission from ref. 72. Copyright 2022 American Chemical Society. (c) Double resonant system of a single Au nano-bipyramid coupled to a fiber cavity. Adapted with permission from ref. 73. Copyright 2021 American Chemical Society. (d) Large area arrays of ball-in-bowl plasmonic nanostructures by assembling gold nanoparticles with porous anodic alumina templates. Adapted with permission from ref. 56. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society. (e) Metal BNAs in the form of 4 × 4 square periodic arrays. Adapted with permission from ref. 74. Copyright 2012 Optical Society of America. (f) Au rod-cup NCs and Au NRs prepared by a controllable wet-chemical method and their experimental SHG strength comparison. Adapted with permission from ref. 75. Copyright 2022 Springer Nature. |
Kang et al. synthesized Au rod-cup nanocrystals (NCs). This nanostructure has several plasmon modes, including transverse dipole (TED), longitudinal electric dipole (LED), magnetic dipole (MD) and toroidal dipole (TD)-modulated LED resonances (anapole state). They found that the SHG intensity of the Au rod-cup NCs was dozens of times greater than that of Au NRs. When the TD and LED modes of the Au rod-cup NCs were in phase oscillation, the sample has a large extinction cross section, allowing efficient capture of light energy in the fundamental frequency mode. Moreover, the LED, TED-based plasmon coupling and MD modes enabled the Au rod-cup NCs to have extremely high scattering efficiency and powerful enhanced near-field effects in frequency-doubled mode (see Fig. 2f).75
Ding et al. used a simple chemical method to synthesize Au nanocups and Au–Ag heteronanocups with controllable asymmetric geometries. The magnetic plasmons of these colloidal nanoparticles have excellent nonlinear optical responses. The maximum SHG signal of the bare Au nanocups was produced by the synergistic effect of the optimized magnetic plasmon resonance and the “lightning-rod effect”. Among other aspects, they demonstrated for the first time that Au–Ag heteronanocups with overgrown Ag nanoparticles were nonlinearly enhanced by synergistic magnetic and electric plasmon resonance and that the hybrid nanostructure has a double resonance mode, which was 21.8 times stronger than the SHG signal of bare Au nanocups (see Fig. 3a).77 Razdolski et al. grew BTIG with a thickness of 4 μm on a gallium gadolinium garnet (GGG) substrate and then deposited a 100 × 100 μm thick (120 nm) Au fringe array on it to prepare an Au/(Bi,Tm) iron garnet (IG) structure. The enhanced magnetization of surface plasmon resonances (SPRs) in this kind of magnetic plasmonic crystal induced an enhancement of SHG and the sensitivity of SHG to SPR at the buried Au/garnet interface was also demonstrated by SHG magnetic contrasts (see Fig. 3b).78 In recent years, the magnetic properties of nonlinear optical phenomena such as SHG in metamaterials have been extensively studied. Kruk et al. experimentally prepared a regular array composed of metal–dielectric–metal nanodisks. This optical metasurface structure has both electrical resonance and magnetic resonance. The experimental results showed that the intensity of the second harmonic signal greatly increased near the magnetic resonance of the metasurface. The numerical results further confirmed that the enhancement in the SHG signal originated from the superposition of the magnetic dipole and electric quadrupole of the metasurface structure (see Fig. 3c).79 Although the study of second harmonic radiation is very complex, researchers have been attempting to achieve directional radiation. Zhang et al. designed metal nanocups with variable orientations using a simple and efficient nanomanufacturing technique. This three-dimensional (3D) plasmonic nanostructure has a magnetic dipole resonance that could greatly enhance the local field.80,81 They experimentally found that adjusting the relative direction of the nanocup and incident light could change the second harmonic radiation direction; in addition, when the excitation power P(ω) was fixed, as the nanocup angle increased, the conversion efficiency of SHG, ηSH = P(2ω)/P(ω), also constantly improved. The finite element method was used to numerically study the nanocup with the same parameters as those used in the experiment. The results showed that the second harmonic light scattered by the nanocup was influenced by the orientation of the nanocup, which was essentially due to the magnetic dipole mode of the nanocup enhancing the SHG intensity; moreover, the magnetic dipole scattered the SHG around the nanocup into a circular profile along its orientation (see Fig. 3d).53 Zhou et al. used chemical synthesis to prepare pointed nanocaps, open nanoshells and hollow nanostars by adjusting the morphology of Au nanoshells using six-pointed PbS nanostars as templates. Since the amount of chloroauric acid was continuously adjusted during the synthesis process, the plasmon resonance peak of the sample also redshifted and broadened due to the synergistic effect of the electric and magnetic plasmon modes. When the opening size of the nanoparticles was appropriate, two maximum SHG intensities could be experimentally observed; these intensities were caused by symmetry breaking and were essentially due to the electromagnetic field enhancement caused by the rich morphology of the nanoparticles (see Fig. 3e).82
Fig. 3 SHG enhancement based on magnetic dipole resonance. (a) Au nanocups and the nonlinear dual-resonance antennas of Au–Ag heteronanocups. Adapted with permission from ref. 77. Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society. (b) Au/(Bi, Tm) iron garnet (IG) perforated magnetic plasma crystals. Adapted with permission from ref. 78. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (c) Metal–dielectric–metal nanodisk optical metasurface structure. Adapted with permission from ref. 79. Copyright 2015 Optica Publishing Group. (d) The orientation of the 3D nanocup affects the direction of second harmonic radiation. Adapted with permission from ref. 53. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society. (e) Pointed nanocaps, open nanoshells, and hollow nanostars. Adapted with permission from ref. 82. Copyright 2021 Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Fig. 4 The energy transfer of the harmonic field is regulated to enhance SHG. (a) TH excitation energy transfer of hollow Au stars. Adapted with permission from ref. 83. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society. (b) Au/PbS/Au nanostars with multiple tips. Adapted with permission from ref. 86. Copyright 2022 Royal Society of Chemistry. (c) Au NRs, Au–Ag NRs, and asymmetric Au@CdSe heterorods. Adapted with permission from ref. 87. Copyright 2020, Science China Press and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. |
Wu et al. experimentally compared the plasmon-enhanced SHG of Au NRs, Au–Ag NRs and asymmetric Au@CdSe heterorods. Due to the asymmetric nanostructure and local field enhancement, the SHG of the asymmetric Au@CdSe heterorods was 617.7 times stronger than that of the Au NRs. Moreover, excitation wavelength-dependent SHG measurements of Au NRs and Au@CdSe side-heterorods also confirmed that the local interband transition of Au caused the harmonic energy transfer (see Fig. 4c).87
In addition to the three aspects introduced above, relevant researchers have also used some other methods to enhance and regulate the nonlinear conversion efficiency in metal nanostructures. These methods include utilizing electric field Fano resonance,88,89 magnetic field Fano resonance,90,91 coupling of metal nanostructures with a nonlinear medium,56,92 lattice resonance,93,94 and so on. In recent years, Fano resonance has gradually become a research hotspot to improve the nonlinear conversion efficiency of SHG. Fano resonance at the fundamental frequency can bind the incident light energy to the surface of metal nanostructures, thus amplifying the surface nonlinear current and enhancing the second harmonic radiation. Zhang et al. experimentally observed fundamental Fano resonance and enhanced SHG signals using gold split nanodisks with narrow split gaps. The local electric field intensity in the near field of the structure is more than 70 times higher than that without Fano resonance and its energy conversion efficiency is also more than 10−11 orders of magnitude.89 Moreover, Yang et al. used three gold nanodisks of different sizes to construct a plasmonic metamolecule. The electromagnetic mode coupling of the metal nanostructure generated magnetic field Fano resonance, thereby enhancing the SHG signal.90 Barium titanate is a kind of nonlinear medium, which can be combined with a gold shell to construct a core–shell nanocavity with an adjustable wavelength of plasmon resonance. When the excitation wavelength is located at the plasmon resonance peak of the composite nanostructure, the light field intensity inside barium titanate at the fundamental frequency is greatly enhanced and the second harmonic intensity is also exponentially enhanced.56 Michaeli et al. experimentally found that the second harmonic efficiency generated by the split-ring resonator arrays under oblique incidence was 30 times greater than that under normal incidence. Through the coupled dipole approximation, it is proved that surface lattice resonance occurs at the second harmonic frequency when the nonlinear Rayleigh–Wood anomaly condition was satisfied, which led to an enhancement of SHG.93
Fig. 5 The application of SHG in the imaging field. (a) Arrays of plasmonic silver nanoholes. Adapted with permission from ref. 105. Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society. (b) Symmetry breaking in single nanoparticles. Adapted with permission from ref. 106. Copyright 2005 American Chemical Society. (c) Colloidal Au-core/Ag-shell nanorods. Adapted with permission from ref. 107. Copyright 2018 Springer Nature. (d) Plasmonic oligomers with different symmetries. Adapted with permission from ref. 108. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society. (e) G-shaped gold nanostructure arrays. Adapted with permission from ref. 109. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society. (f) Plasmonic-semiconductor hybrid nanosystem consisting of a ZnO nanowire coupled to a gold pentamer oligomer. Adapted with permission from ref. 110. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society. |
Bautista et al. used SHG microscopy with cylindrical vector beams (CVBs) to study the collective effects of plasmonic oligomers composed of Au NRs with different spatial symmetries and observed that their SHG efficiency strongly dependent on the polarization of the incident CVBs and on interparticle effects; this study provided a new way of investigating coupling effects in the complex arrangements of nano-objects (see Fig. 5d).108 High-intensity second harmonic sources within each unit cell are shown in the SHG microscopy images of G-shaped gold nanostructure arrays and this study demonstrated that plasma hotspots could be accurately mapped in conjunction with SHG microscopy (see Fig. 5e).109 Grinblat et al. placed a single ZnO nanowire in the hotspot of a plasmonic oligomer, enabling a precise quantity of SH efficiency and field enhancement by observing the second harmonic light emitted from the mixed sample using a confocal microscope (see Fig. 5f).110
Fig. 6 The application of SHG in the sensing field. (a) Second harmonic resonant aluminum nanoantennas. Adapted with permission from ref. 111. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society. (b) Au NRs as a plasmonic transducer. Adapted with permission from ref. 112. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society. (c) Optical sensing device for generating SHG by electric control in electrolytic solution. Adapted with permission from ref. 113. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society. (d) A sensing device based on an array of non-centrosymmetric plasmonic nanoantennas integrated into a microfluidic chip. Adapted with permission from ref. 114. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society. (e) Silver metal nanoparticles producing multipolar SHG. Adapted with permission from ref. 115. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society. (f) 3D metal SHIN substrates. Adapted with permission from ref. 116. Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. |
Studies related to sensing devices integrated into microfluidic chips based on non-centrosymmetric plasmonic nanoantenna arrays with enhanced SHG have also been reported. The experimental results were evaluated and found to be at least three times more sensitive in the nonlinear state than in the linear state (see Fig. 6d).114 Furthermore, Butet et al. theoretically calculated the SHG response of silver nanospheres to refractive index changes using Mie theory and the multipolar expansion of the electromagnetic field to demonstrate that sensing using multipolar surface plasmon resonance was more sensitive than sensing in the linear optical regime. This report provided theoretical support for further development of nonlinear spectral technology based on SHG (see Fig. 6e).115 Yang et al. invented a 3D hotspot platform for quantity detection of plasmon-enhanced SHG. They placed a drop of a solution of active nanoparticles coated with a silica layer on a hydrophobic silicon wafer and it was directly evaporated. During the evaporation process, as the distance between nanoparticles continued to shrink, the number of 3D hot spots generated also continued to increase, resulting in a sharp increase in the SHG signal. The 3D metal shell-isolated nanoparticle (SHIN) substrates exhibited more stable plasmon-enhanced SHG signals due to the protective SiO2 shells; therefore, 3D hotspot platforms have great potential for plasmon-enhanced nonlinear spectroscopy as well as practical sensor applications (see Fig. 6f).116
Fig. 7 The application of SHG in the field of in situ monitoring. (a) Photocatalytic redox on the surface of colloidal Ag NPs. Adapted with permission from ref. 117. Copyright 2021 Royal Society of Chemistry. (b) In situ nonlinear SHS of the seeded growth of Au nanoshells on silica core particles. Adapted with permission from ref. 118. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society. (c) Colloidal miRNA-functionalized nanoparticles. Adapted with permission from ref. 119. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society. (d) Colloidal Ag@Au CS nanoparticles. Adapted with permission from ref. 120. Copyright 2021 American Chemical Society. (e) Novel CSS nanoparticles. Adapted with permission from ref. 121. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society. (f) Colloidal Au nanoparticles of 50 nm in water. Adapted with permission from ref. 122. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. |
As a powerful and noninvasive surface-sensitive technique, SHG can also be used to study the surface charge density of colloidal nanoparticles. For example, Kumal et al. determined the surface charge density of 50 nm Au nanoparticles functionalized with mercaptosuccinic acid (MSA) in water by fitting the experimental SHG measurement results to a function and a theoretical model for increasing the electrolyte concentration. This SHG χ(3) method is also known as the electric field induced second harmonic (EFISH) technique. The results of this study significantly contributed to further understanding the surface chemistry of colloidal nanoparticles in water (see Fig. 7f).122
With the coordinated development of theory and technology in the field of nanophotonics, plasmon-enhanced SHG based on metal nanostructures has ushered in new development opportunities. By combining emerging two-dimensional (2D) materials with plasmonic metal nanostructures in recent years, the nonlinear effect of SHG has been enhanced to varying degrees. 2D materials have many advantages, such as atomic thickness, good structural stability and a strong nonlinear optical response. The nonlinear optical response of 2D materials is also adjustable and can be enhanced by exciton resonance and other methods. This approach also provides a new degree of freedom in energy valleys, which can lead to new possibilities for the construction of nonlinear optical devices.123–127 Therefore, the composite structure formed with 2D materials and metal nanostructures may be used to develop nonlinear optical devices with high integration and high conversion efficiency. In recent years, relevant SHG research results have also been obtained. In 2020, Han et al. used nanoparticles on a mirror model to construct a surface plasmon nanocavity, controlling its surface plasmon resonance to match the second harmonic emission wavelength of monolayer WS2, greatly increasing the incident electric field intensity, and ultimately achieving more than 300-fold SHG enhancement.128 Zhang et al. constructed a nonlinear plasmon–exciton coupling system with adjustable second-order susceptibility. The SHG conversion efficiency of this system was three orders of magnitude greater than that of bare exciton materials on a film. This work provided a new powerful method to enhance SHG.129 In summary, introducing 2D materials into plasmon SHG systems based on metal nanostructures is highly beneficial for increasing the control of SHG and enhancing the intensity of SHG signals. These characteristics indicate that the combination of SHG based on plasmonic metal nanostructures and 2D materials will further promote the application of these materials in the field of optical information.
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