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1 chuckv 3208 \section{Introduction}
2 gezelter 3217
3     Excitation of the plasmon resonance in metallic nanoparticles has
4     attracted enormous interest in the past several years. This is partly
5     due to the location of the plasmon band in the near IR for particles
6     in a wide range of sizes and geometries. (Living tissue is nearly
7     transparent in the near IR, and for this reason, there is an
8     unrealized potential for metallic nanoparticles to be used in both
9     diagnostic and therapeutic settings.) One of the side effects of
10     absorption of laser radiation at these frequencies is the rapid
11     (sub-picosecond) heating of the electronic degrees of freedom in the
12     metal. This hot electron gas quickly transfers heat to the phonon
13     modes of the lattice, resulting in a rapid heating of the metal
14     particles.
15    
16     Since metallic nanoparticles have a large surface area to volume
17     ratio, many of the metal atoms are at surface locations and experience
18     relatively weak bonding. This is observable in a lowering of the
19     melting temperatures and a substantial softening of the bulk modulus
20     of these particles when compared with bulk metallic samples. One of
21     the side effects of the excitation of small metallic nanoparticles at
22     the plasmon resonance is the facile creation of liquid metal
23     droplets.
24    
25     Much of the experimental work on this subject has been carried out in
26 chuckv 3222 the Hartland and von~Plessen groups.\cite{HartlandG.V._jp0276092,Hodak:2000rb,Hartland:2003lr,Petrova:2007qy,Link:2000lr} These experiments mostly use the technique of time-resolved optical pump-probe spectroscopy where a pump laser pulse serves to excite conduction band electrons in the nanoparticle and a following probe laser pulse allows the electron-phonon coupling to be observed as a function of time. Hu and Hartland have observed a direct relation between the size of the nanoparticle and the observed cooling rate using such pump-probe techniques.\cite{HuM._jp020581+} Pleach {\it et al.} have use pulsed x-ray scattering as a probe to directly access changes to atomic structure following pump excitation.\cite{plech:195423} They further determined that heat transfer in nanoparticles to the surrounding solvent is goverened by interfacial dynamics and not the thermal transport properties of the solvent.
27 gezelter 3217
28    
29     Since these experiments are often carried out in condensed phase
30     surroundings, the large surface area to volume ratio makes the heat
31     transfer to the surrounding solvent also a relatively rapid process.
32     In our recent simulation study of the laser excitation of gold
33 chuckv 3220 nanoparticles,\cite{VardemanC.F._jp051575r} we observed that the cooling rate for these
34 gezelter 3219 particles (10$^{11}$-10$^{12}$ K/s) is in excess of the cooling rate
35 gezelter 3217 required for glass formation in bulk metallic alloys. Given this
36     fact, it may be possible to use laser excitation to melt, alloy and
37     quench metallic nanoparticles in order to form metallic glass
38     nanobeads.
39    
40     To study whether or not glass nanobead formation is feasible, we have
41     chosen the bimetallic alloy of Silver (60\%) and Copper (40\%) as a
42     model system because it is an experimentally known glass former and
43     has been used previously as a theoretical model for glassy
44 gezelter 3219 dynamics.\cite{Vardeman-II:2001jn} The Hume-Rothery rules suggest that
45     alloys composed of Copper and Silver should be miscible in the solid
46     state, because their lattice constants are within 15\% of each
47 gezelter 3221 another.\cite{Kittel:1996fk} Experimentally, however Ag-Cu alloys are a
48 gezelter 3219 well-known exception to this rule and are only miscible in the liquid
49     state given equilibrium conditions. Below the eutectic temperature of
50     779 $^\circ$C and composition (60.1\% Ag, 39.9\% Cu), the
51     solid alloys of Ag and Cu will phase separate into Ag and Cu rich
52     $\alpha$ and $\beta$ phases, respectively. This behavior is due to a
53     positive heat of mixing in both the solid and liquid phases. For the
54     one-to-one composition fcc solid solution, $\Delta H$ is on the order
55 chuckv 3220 of +6~kJ/mole.\cite{Ma:2005fk} Non-equilibrium solid solutions may be
56 gezelter 3219 formed by undercooling, and under these conditions, a
57     compositionally-disordered $\gamma$ fcc phase can be formed.
58 gezelter 3217
59 gezelter 3219 Metastable alloys composed of Ag-Cu were first reported by Duwez in
60     1960 and were created by using a ``splat quenching'' technique in
61     which a liquid droplet is propelled by a shock wave against a cooled
62     metallic target.\cite{duwez:1136} Because of the small positive
63     $\Delta H$, supersaturated crystalline solutions are typically
64     obtained rather than an amorphous phase. Higher $\Delta H$ systems,
65     such as Ag-Ni, are immiscible even in liquid states, but they tend to
66     form metastable alloys much more readily than Ag-Cu. If present, the
67     amorphous Ag-Cu phase is usually seen as the minority phase in most
68     experiments. Because of this unique crystalline-amorphous behavior,
69     the Ag-Cu system has been widely studied. Methods for creating such
70     bulk phase structures include splat quenching, vapor deposition, ion
71     beam mixing and mechanical alloying. Both structural
72     \cite{sheng:184203} and dynamic\cite{Vardeman-II:2001jn}
73     computational studies have also been performed on this system.
74 chuckv 3218
75 gezelter 3219 Although bulk Ag-Cu alloys have been studied widely, this alloy has
76     been mostly overlooked in nanoscale materials. The literature on
77     alloyed metallic nanoparticles has dealt with the Ag-Au system, which
78     has the useful property of being miscible on both solid and liquid
79     phases. Nanoparticles of another miscible system, Au-Cu, have been
80     successfully constructed using techniques such as laser
81     ablation,\cite{Malyavantham:2004cu} and the synthetic reduction of
82     metal ions in solution.\cite{Kim:2003lv} Laser induced alloying has
83     been used as a technique for creating Au-Ag alloy particles from
84 gezelter 3221 core-shell particles.\cite{Hartland:2003lr} To date, attempts at
85 gezelter 3219 creating Ag-Cu nanoparticles have used ion implantation to embed
86     nanoparticles in a glass matrix.\cite{De:1996ta,Magruder:1994rg} These
87     attempts have been largely unsuccessful in producing mixed alloy
88     nanoparticles, and instead produce phase segregated or core-shell
89     structures.
90 chuckv 3218
91 gezelter 3219 One of the more successful attempts at creating intermixed Ag-Cu
92     nanoparticles used alternate pulsed laser ablation and deposition in
93     an amorphous Al$_2$O$_3$ matrix.\cite{gonzalo:5163} Surface plasmon
94     resonance (SPR) of bimetallic core-shell structures typically show two
95     distinct resonance peaks where mixed particles show a single shifted
96     and broadened resonance.\cite{Hodak:2000rb} The SPR for pure silver
97 chuckv 3222 occurs at 400 nm and for copper at 570 nm.\cite{HengleinA._jp992950g}
98     On Al$_2$O$_3$ films, these resonances move to 424 nm and 572 nm for the pure metals. For
99 gezelter 3219 bimetallic nanoparticles with 40\% Ag an absorption peak is seen
100     between 400-550 nm. With increasing Ag content, the SPR shifts
101     towards the blue, with the peaks nearly coincident at a composition of
102 chuckv 3222 57\% Ag. Gonzalo {\it et al.} cited the existence of a single broad
103 gezelter 3219 resonance peak as evidence of a mixed alloy particle rather than a
104     phase segregated system. Unfortunately, they were unable to determine
105     whether the mixed nanoparticles were an amorphous phase or a
106     supersaturated crystalline phase. One consequence of embedding the
107     Ag-Cu nanoparticles in a glass matrix is that the SPR can be shifted
108     because of the nanoparticle-glass matrix
109     interaction.\cite{De:1996ta,Roy:2003dy}
110 chuckv 3218
111 gezelter 3219 Characterization of glassy behavior by molecular dynamics simulations
112     is typically done using dynamic measurements such as the mean squared
113     displacement, $\langle r^2(t) \rangle$. Liquids exhibit a mean squared
114     displacement that is linear in time (at long times). Glassy materials
115     deviate significantly from this linear behavior at intermediate times,
116     entering a sub-linear regime with a return to linear behavior in the
117 chuckv 3220 infinite time limit.\cite{Kob:1999fk} However, diffusion in nanoparticles
118 gezelter 3219 differs significantly from the bulk in that atoms are confined to a
119     roughly spherical volume and cannot explore any region larger than the
120     particle radius ($R$). In these confined geometries, $\langle r^2(t)
121 chuckv 3220 \rangle$ approaches a limiting value of $3R^2/40$.\cite{ShibataT._ja026764r} This limits the
122 gezelter 3219 utility of dynamical measures of glass formation when studying
123     nanoparticles.
124 chuckv 3218
125 gezelter 3219 However, glassy materials exhibit strong icosahedral ordering among
126     nearest-neghbors in contrast to crystalline or liquid structures.
127     Local icosahedral structures are the three-dimensional equivalent of
128     covering a two-dimensional plane with 5-sided tiles; they cannot be
129     used to tile space in a periodic fashion, and are therefore an
130     indicator of non-periodic packing in amorphous solids. Steinhart {\it
131     et al.} defined an orientational bond order parameter that is
132     sensitive to icosahedral ordering.\cite{Steinhardt:1983mo} This bond
133     order parameter can therefore be used to characterize glass formation
134 chuckv 3220 in liquid and solid solutions.\cite{wolde:9932}
135 chuckv 3218
136 gezelter 3219 Theoretical molecular dynamics studies have been performed on the
137     formation of amorphous single component nanoclusters of either
138     gold,\cite{Chen:2004ec,Cleveland:1997jb,Cleveland:1997gu} or
139     nickel,\cite{Gafner:2004bg,Qi:2001nn} by rapid cooling($\thicksim
140     10^{12}-10^{13}$ K/s) from a liquid state. All of these studies found
141     icosahedral ordering in the resulting structures produced by this
142     rapid cooling which can be evidence of the formation of a amorphous
143 gezelter 3221 structure.\cite{Strandburg:1992qy} The nearest neighbor information was
144 gezelter 3219 obtained from pair correlation functions, common neighbor analysis and
145     bond order parameters.\cite{Steinhardt:1983mo} It should be noted that
146     these studies used single component systems with cooling rates that
147     are only obtainable in computer simulations and particle sizes less
148     than 20\AA. Single component systems are known to form amorphous
149     states in small clusters,\cite{Breaux:rz} but do not generally form
150     amorphous structures in bulk materials. Icosahedral structures have
151     also been reported in nanoparticles, particularly multiply twinned
152     particles.\cite{Ascencio:2000qy}
153 chuckv 3218
154 gezelter 3219 Since the nanoscale Ag-Cu alloy has been largely unexplored, many
155     interesting questions remain about the formation and properties of
156     such a system. Does the large surface to volume ratio aid Ag-Cu
157     nanoparticles in rapid cooling and formation of an amorphous state?
158     Would a predisposition to isosahedral ordering in nanoparticles also
159     allow for easier formation of an amorphous state and what is the
160     preferred ordering in a amorphous nanoparticle? Nanoparticles have
161     been shown to have size dependent melting
162     transition,\cite{Buffat:1976yq} and we would expect a similar trend
163     to follow for the glass transition temperature.
164 chuckv 3218
165 gezelter 3219 In the sections below, we describe our modeling of the laser
166     excitation and subsequent cooling of the particles in silico to mimic
167     real experimental conditions. The simulation parameters have been
168     tuned to the degree possible to match experimental conditions, and we
169     discusss both the icosahedral ordering in the system, as well as the
170     clustering of icosahedral centers that we observed.
171 chuckv 3218