Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks

Percolation in nanoporous gold can be achieved with as little as 8% by volume of gold. Samples of nanoporous gold of various morphologies are analyzed with a combination of electrical and optical data. Growing thin films and complex multiply connected three-dimensional networks both display nonunive...

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Main Authors: Smith, Geoffrey B., Maaroof, Abbas I., Cortie, Michael B.
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Published: Animo Repository 2008
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8173
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-87962023-01-26T01:45:28Z Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks Smith, Geoffrey B. Maaroof, Abbas I. Cortie, Michael B. Percolation in nanoporous gold can be achieved with as little as 8% by volume of gold. Samples of nanoporous gold of various morphologies are analyzed with a combination of electrical and optical data. Growing thin films and complex multiply connected three-dimensional networks both display nonuniversal character. Growing films have two-dimensional morphology but a three-dimensional percolation threshold and nonuniversal critical coefficients, yet similar silver films percolate as expected with universal coefficients. Growing gold however regresses to two-dimensional resistive behavior between 65% to 100% gold, and this regime lies along a single power-law curve shared by the hyperdimensional networks of gold, suggesting underlying symmetry governed by diffusion-limited aggregation. Models of data imply either hyperdimensionality or major internal property changes as density shifts. The distinctive flat spectral signature found near the percolation threshold is common to all highly porous samples and is explained quantitatively in terms of effective plasmonic response. Parameters from fits of effective medium models to optical and resistivity data are in close agreement, especially at the highest porosities. They imply an effective dimension which increases continuously as porosity grows via the increased branching needed for structural integrity. 2008-10-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8173 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Percolation Gold Metallic films Porosity Physics
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Percolation
Gold
Metallic films
Porosity
Physics
spellingShingle Percolation
Gold
Metallic films
Porosity
Physics
Smith, Geoffrey B.
Maaroof, Abbas I.
Cortie, Michael B.
Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
description Percolation in nanoporous gold can be achieved with as little as 8% by volume of gold. Samples of nanoporous gold of various morphologies are analyzed with a combination of electrical and optical data. Growing thin films and complex multiply connected three-dimensional networks both display nonuniversal character. Growing films have two-dimensional morphology but a three-dimensional percolation threshold and nonuniversal critical coefficients, yet similar silver films percolate as expected with universal coefficients. Growing gold however regresses to two-dimensional resistive behavior between 65% to 100% gold, and this regime lies along a single power-law curve shared by the hyperdimensional networks of gold, suggesting underlying symmetry governed by diffusion-limited aggregation. Models of data imply either hyperdimensionality or major internal property changes as density shifts. The distinctive flat spectral signature found near the percolation threshold is common to all highly porous samples and is explained quantitatively in terms of effective plasmonic response. Parameters from fits of effective medium models to optical and resistivity data are in close agreement, especially at the highest porosities. They imply an effective dimension which increases continuously as porosity grows via the increased branching needed for structural integrity.
format text
author Smith, Geoffrey B.
Maaroof, Abbas I.
Cortie, Michael B.
author_facet Smith, Geoffrey B.
Maaroof, Abbas I.
Cortie, Michael B.
author_sort Smith, Geoffrey B.
title Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
title_short Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
title_full Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
title_fullStr Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
title_full_unstemmed Percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
title_sort percolation in nanoporous gold and the principle of universality for two-dimensional to hyperdimensional networks
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2008
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8173
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