Localised surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) of sub-wavelength metallic nanoantennas can greatly improve light-matter interactions at the nanoscale beyond the optical diffraction limit and holds great promise for applications ranging from plasmonic photocatalysis to biosensing. Although these applications exploit LSPR-related energy transfer, understanding physical and chemical mechanisms of the LSPR-related energy transfer remains elusive and often relies on complex experimental setups. In this thesis, physical and chemical mechanisms for LSPR-related energy transfer from Al and Au nanoantennas at the single nanoantenna level were investigated using novel methods based on electron beam irradiation and Raman spectroscopy. LSPR-related energ...