Micro-Extinction Spectroscopy (MExS): a versatile optical characterization technique
Authors
Kumar, Anjli
Villarreal, Eduardo
Zhang, Xiang
Ringe, Emilie
Publication Date
2018-07-12Type
Journal Article
Metadata
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Kumar, A., Villarreal, E., Zhang, X., & Ringe, E. (2018). Micro-Extinction Spectroscopy (MExS): a versatile optical characterization technique. [Journal Article]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40679-018-0057-6
Abstract
Abstract
Micro-Extinction Spectroscopy (MExS), a flexible, optical, and spatial-scanning hyperspectral technique, has been developed and is described with examples. Software and hardware capabilities are described in detail, including transmission, reflectance, and scattering measurements. Each capability is demonstrated through a case study of nanomaterial characterization, i.e., transmission of transition metal dichalcogenides revealing transition energy and efficiency, reflectance of transition metal dichalcogenides grown on nontransparent substrates identifying the presence of monolayer following electrochemical ablation, and scattering to study single plasmonic nanoparticles and obtain values for the refractive index sensitivity and sensing figure of merit of over a hundred single particles with various shapes and sizes. With the growing integration of nanotechnology in many areas, MExS can be a powerful tool to both characterize and test nanomaterials.
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40679-018-0057-6
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.25411
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Rights Holder: The Author(s)
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