Abstract

Large scale simulations are performed by means of the transfer-matrix method to reveal optimal conditions for metal-dielectric core-shell particles to induce the largest fluorescence on their surfaces. With commonly used plasmonic cores (Au and Ag) and dielectric shells (SiO2, Al2O3, ZnO), optimal core and shell radii are determined to reach maximum fluorescence enhancement for each wavelength within 550~850 nm (Au core) and 390~500 nm (Ag core) bands, in both air and aqueous hosts. The peak value of the maximum achievable fluorescence enhancement factors of core-shell nanoparticles, taken over entire wavelength interval, increases with the shell refractive index and can reach values up to 9 and 70 for Au and Ag cores, within 600~700 nm and 400~450 nm wavelength ranges, respectively, which is much larger than that for corresponding homogeneous metal nanoparticles. Replacing air by an aqueous host has a dramatic effect of nearly halving the sizes of optimal core-shell configurations at the peak value of the maximum achievable fluorescence. In the case of Au cores,the fluorescence enhancements for wavelengths within the first near-infrared biological window (NIR-I) between 700 and 900 nm can be improved twofold compared to homogeneous Au particle when the shell refractive index ns > 2. As a rule of thumb, the wavelength region of optimal fluorescence (maximal nonradiative decay) turns out to be red-shifted (blue-shifted) by as much as 50 nm relative to the localized surface plasmon resonance wavelength of corresponding optimized core-shell particle. Our results provide important design rules and general guidelines for enabling versatile platforms for imaging, light source, and biological applications.

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