ArXiv TLDR

Suppressing Plasmonic Heating in Aqueous Environments with Hexagonal Boron Nitride

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2605.00587

Martina Russo, Roland van der Vegt, Bohai Liu, Sam Beijers, Sara Salera + 3 more

physics.opticscond-mat.mes-hall

TLDR

Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) thin flakes effectively suppress plasmonic heating in aqueous environments by up to 60%, offering a new thermal management strategy.

Key contributions

  • hBN thin flakes reduce plasmonic heating of gold nanospheres in water by up to 60%.
  • Finite-element simulations quantify hBN thickness and interfacial thermal conductance effects.
  • Cross-grating wavefront microscopy (CGM) experimentally validates hBN's cooling effect.
  • Identified direct and indirect heat dissipation pathways from nanoparticles to hBN.

Why it matters

Plasmonic heating is a critical challenge in nanoscale systems, degrading performance in biosensing and microelectronics. This work demonstrates hBN as an effective heat spreader, reducing temperature rise by up to 60%. It offers crucial design guidelines for integrating 2D materials into thermally sensitive platforms.

Original Abstract

Optical heating of plasmonic nanostructures is a critical challenge in nanoscale systems. Although plasmonic effects enable enhanced optical functionalities, the associated temperature rise can degrade performance in heat-sensitive applications such as biosensing, nanophotonics, and microelectronics. Conventional cooling strategies fail at these scales due to limited heat transport and high interfacial thermal resistance, motivating the integration of advanced materials for thermal management. Here, we investigate hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) thin flakes as heat spreaders to mitigate plasmonic heating of gold nanospheres immobilized on hBN deposited on glass and surrounded by water. Using finite-element simulations, we quantify the influence of hBN thickness, in-plane thermal conductivity, and interfacial thermal conductance on cooling efficiency. Complementary experiments employ cross-grating wavefront microscopy (CGM) for nanothermometry to map the temperature around optically heated gold nanoparticles and quantify the cooling effect of hBN. We extend the application of CGM for rapid, non-invasive, and all-optical characterization of non-absorbing 2D materials. Our results reveal a strong thickness dependence, where heat dissipation in thin flakes is limited by the heat capacity of hBN and in thick flakes by interfacial thermal conductance. Including hBN, we obtain a reduction in temperature rise by up to 60% compared to glass. In addition, the presence of two main heat dissipation pathways emerges: a direct one from the nanoparticle to the hBN and an indirect one from the particle via water to the hBN. This combined simulation-experiment framework offers a versatile approach to improve thermal management in plasmonic systems and beyond, establishing design guidelines for integrating 2D materials into thermally sensitive platforms such as biosensors and integrated circuits.

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