13 research outputs found
Bow-tie nano-antenna assisted generation of extreme ultraviolet radiation
Pfullmann N, Waltermann C, Noack M, et al. Bow-tie nano-antenna assisted generation of extreme ultraviolet radiation. New Journal Of Physics. 2013;15(9): 93027.We report on the generation of extreme ultraviolet radiation utilizing the plasmonic field enhancement in arrays of bow-tie gold optical antennae. Furthermore, their suitability to support high-order harmonic generation is examined by means of finite-difference time-domain calculations and experiments. Particular emphasis is paid to the thermal properties, which become significant at the employed peak intensities. A damage threshold depending on the antenna length is predicted and confirmed by our experimental findings. Moreover, the gas density in the vicinity of the antennae is characterized experimentally to determine the number of atoms contributing to the measured radiation, which is almost an order of magnitude larger than previously reported
Nanostripe length dependence of plasmon-induced material deformations
Following the impact of a single femtosecond light pulse on nickel nanostripes, material deformations—or “nanobumps”—are created. We have studied the dependence of these nanobumps on the length of nanostripes and verified the link with plasmons. More specifically, local electric currents can melt the nanostructures in the hotspots, where hydrodynamic processes give rise to nanobumps. This process is further confirmed by independently
simulating local magnetic fields, since these are produced by the same local electric currents