Abstract

The preparation of very thin (at the scale of a few tens of nanometers) gold films by thermal evaporation and deposition on a solid substrate (glass) remains a key step for the elaboration of transparent and sensitive optical biosensors. We study the influence of the glass surface treatment and its thermal conductivity on the structure and composition of evaporated gold films. Using a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM), high resolution surface plasmon resonance (SPR) imaging, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), we demonstrate that the grafting of a layer of long chain mercaptant, using 11-mercaptoundecyltrimethoxysilane ( S ξ Si ) , prior to gold deposition produces a drastic modification of gold inner and surface textures. A thorough investigation of AFM image topography by 2D wavelet-based segmentation method reveals the flat conical shape of the gold surface grains and their shape invariance with the glass surface chemical treatment. However, this treatment leads to a drastic decrease of the mean size and polydispersity of these grains by a factor of 2, thereby lowering the gold surface roughness. The rationale is that the combination of surface forces and thermal transfer drives the formation of homogeneous and flatter gold films.

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