4 research outputs found
Media 1: Particle plasmon resonances in L-shaped gold nanoparticles
Originally published in Optics Express on 02 August 2010 (oe-18-16-16601
Second-Harmonic Generation from Metal Nanoparticles: Resonance Enhancement versus Particle Geometry
We demonstrate that optical second-harmonic
generation (SHG) from arrays of noncentrosymmetric gold nanoparticles
depends essentially on particle geometry. We prepare nanoparticles
with different geometrical shapes (L and T) but similar wavelengths
for the polarization-dependent plasmon resonances. In contrast to
recent interpretations emphasizing resonances at the fundamental frequency,
the T shape leads to stronger SHG when only one, instead of both,
polarization component of the fundamental field is resonant. This
is explained by the character of plasmon oscillations supported by
the two shapes. Our numerical simulations for both linear and second-order
responses display unprecedented agreement with measurements
Metamaterials with Tailored Nonlinear Optical Response
We demonstrate that the second-order nonlinear optical
response
of noncentrosymmetric metal nanoparticles (metamolecules) can be efficiently
controlled by their mutual ordering in an array. Two samples with
minor change in ordering have nonlinear responses differing by a factor
of up to 50. The results arise from polarization-dependent plasmonic
resonances modified by long-range coupling associated with metamolecular
ordering. The approach opens new ways for tailoring the nonlinear
responses of metamaterials and their tensorial properties
Local Field Asymmetry Drives Second-Harmonic Generation in Noncentrosymmetric Nanodimers
We demonstrate that second-harmonic generation (SHG) from arrays of noncentrosymmetric T-shaped gold nanodimers with a nanogap arises
from asymmetry in the local fundamental field distribution and is not related strictly to nanogap size. Calculations show that the local field
contains orthogonal polarization components not present in the exciting field, which yield the dominant SHG response. The strongest SHG
responses occur through the local surface susceptibility of the particles for a fundamental field distributed asymmetrically at the particle
perimeters. Weak responses result from more symmetric distributions despite high field enhancement in the nanogap. Nearly constant field
enhancement persists for relatively large nanogap sizes
