5,095 research outputs found
Spoof surface plasmons guided by narrow grooves
An approximate description of surface waves propagating along periodically
grooved surfaces is intuitively developed in the limit where the grooves are
narrow relative to the period. Considering acoustic and electromagnetic waves
guided by rigid and perfectly conducting gratings, respectively, the wave field
is obtained by interrelating elementary approximations obtained in three
overlapping spatial domains. Specifically, above the grating and on the scale
of the period the grooves are effectively reduced to point resonators
characterised by their dimensions as well as the geometry of their apertures.
Along with this descriptive physical picture emerges an analytical dispersion
relation, which agrees remarkably well with exact calculations and improves on
preceding approximations. Scalings and explicit formulae are obtained by
simplifying the theory in three distinguished propagation regimes, namely where
the Bloch wavenumber is respectively smaller than, close to, or larger than
that corresponding to a groove resonance. Of particular interest is the latter
regime where the field within the grooves is resonantly enhanced and the field
above the grating is maximally localised, attenuating on a length scale
comparable with the period
Singular perturbations approach to localized surface-plasmon resonance: Nearly touching metal nanospheres
Metallic nano-structures characterised by multiple geometric length scales
support low-frequency surface-plasmon modes, which enable strong light
localization and field enhancement. We suggest studying such configurations
using singular perturbation methods, and demonstrate the efficacy of this
approach by considering, in the quasi-static limit, a pair of nearly touching
metallic nano-spheres subjected to an incident electromagnetic wave polarized
with the electric field along the line of sphere centers. Rather than
attempting an exact analytical solution, we construct the pertinent
(longitudinal) eigen-modes by matching relatively simple asymptotic expansions
valid in overlapping spatial domains. We thereby arrive at an effective
boundary eigenvalue problem in a half-space representing the metal region in
the vicinity of the gap. Coupling with the gap field gives rise to a mixed-type
boundary condition with varying coefficients, whereas coupling with the
particle-scale field enters through an integral eigenvalue selection rule
involving the electrostatic capacitance of the configuration. By solving the
reduced problem we obtain accurate closed-form expressions for the resonance
values of the metal dielectric function. Furthermore, together with an
energy-like integral relation, the latter eigen-solutions yield also
closed-form approximations for the induced-dipole moment and gap-field
enhancement under resonance. We demonstrate agreement between the asymptotic
formulas and a semi-numerical computation. The analysis, underpinned by
asymptotic scaling arguments, elucidates how metal polarization together with
geometrical confinement enables a strong plasmon-frequency redshift and
amplified near-field at resonance.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Asymptotic network models of subwavelength metamaterials formed by closely packed photonic and phononic crystals
We demonstrate that photonic and phononic crystals consisting of closely
spaced inclusions constitute a versatile class of subwavelength metamaterials.
Intuitively, the voids and narrow gaps that characterise the crystal form an
interconnected network of Helmholtz-like resonators. We use this intuition to
argue that these continuous photonic (phononic) crystals are in fact
asymptotically equivalent, at low frequencies, to discrete capacitor-inductor
(mass-spring) networks whose lumped parameters we derive explicitly. The
crystals are tantamount to metamaterials as their entire acoustic branch, or
branches when the discrete analogue is polyatomic, is squeezed into a
subwavelength regime where the ratio of wavelength to period scales like the
ratio of period to gap width raised to the power 1/4; at yet larger wavelengths
we accordingly find a comparably large effective refractive index. The fully
analytical dispersion relations predicted by the discrete models yield
dispersion curves that agree with those from finite-element simulations of the
continuous crystals. The insight gained from the network approach is used to
show that, surprisingly, the continuum created by a closely packed hexagonal
lattice of cylinders is represented by a discrete honeycomb lattice. The
analogy is utilised to show that the hexagonal continuum lattice has a
Dirac-point degeneracy that is lifted in a controlled manner by specifying the
area of a symmetry-breaking defect
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