We demonstrate a novel fabrication approach for high-throughput fabrication of engineered infrared plasmonic nanorod
antenna arrays with nanostencil lithography (NSL). NSL technique, relying on deposition of materials through a shadow
mask, offers the flexibility and the resolution to radiatively engineer nanoantenna arrays for excitation of collective
plasmonic resonances. As stencil, we use suspended silicon nitride membrane patterned with nanoapertures and fabricate
nanorod antenna arrays. Our spectral measurements and electron microscopy images faithfully confirm the feasibility of
NSL technique for large area patterning of nanorod antenna arrays with optical qualities achievable by electron-beam
lithography. Furthermore, we show nanostencils can be reused multiple times to fabricate same structures repeatedly and
reliably with identical optical responses. This capability is particularly useful when high-throughput replication of the
optimized nanoparticle arrays is desired. In addition to its high-throughput capability, NSL permits fabrication of
plasmonic devices on surfaces that are difficult to work with electron/ion beam techniques. Nanostencil lithography is a
resist free process thus allows the transfer of the nanopatterns to any planar substrate whether it is conductive, insulating
or magnetic. As proof of the versatility of the NSL technique, by simply changing the aperture pattern on the silicon
nitride membrane, we show fabrication of plasmonic structures in variety of geometries and on different substrates.
Nanostencil Lithography enables fabrication of plasmonic substrates supporting spectrally narrow far-field resonances
with enhanced near-field intensities. Overlapping these collective plasmonic resonances with molecular specific
absorption bands can enable ultrasensitive vibrational spectroscopy.
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