35,048 research outputs found
Curved Gratings as Plasmonic Lenses for Linearly Polarised Light
The ability of curved gratings as sectors of concentric circular gratings to
couple linearly polarized light into focused surface plasmons is investigated
by theory, simulation and experiment. Curved gratings, as sectors of concentric
circular gratings with four different sector angles, are etched into a 30-nm
thick gold layer on a glass coverslip and used to couple linearly-polarised
free space light at nm into surface plasmons. The experimental and simulation
results show that increasing the sector angle of the curved gratings decreases
the lateral spotsize of the excited surface plasmons, resulting in focussing of
surface plasmons which is analogous to the behaviour of classical optical
lenses. We also show that two faced curved gratings, with their groove radius
mismatched by half of the plasmon wavelength (asymmetric configuration), can
couple linearly-polarised light into a single focal spot of concentrated
surface plasmons with smaller depth of focus and higher intensity in comparison
to single-sided curved gratings. The major advantage of these structures is the
coupling of linearly-polarised light into focused surface plasmons with access
to and control of the plasmon focal spot, which facilitates potential
applications in sensing, detection and nonlinear plasmonics.Comment: 15 pages and 12 figure
Excitation of surface plasmons at a SiO2/Ag interface by silicon quantum dots: Experiment and theory
The excitation of surface plasmons (SPs) by optically excited silicon quantum dots (QDs) located near a Ag interface is studied both experimentally and theoretically for different QD-interface separations. The Si QDs are formed in the near-surface region of an SiO2 substrate by Si ion implantation and thermal annealing. Photoluminescence decay-rate distributions, as derived from an inverse Laplace transform of the measured decay trace, are determined for samples with and without a Ag cover layer. For the smallest, investigated Si-QDs-to-interface distance of 44 nm the average decay rate at lambda=750 nm is enhanced by 80% due to the proximity of the Ag-glass interface, with respect to an air-glass interface. Calculations based on a classical dipole oscillator model show that the observed decay rate enhancement is mainly due to the excitation of surface plasmons that are on the SiO2/Ag interface. By comparing the model calculations to the experimental data, it is determined that Si QDs have a very high internal emission quantum efficiency of (77±17)%. At this distance they can excite surface plasmons at a rate of (1.1±0.2)×104 s¿1. From the model it is also predicted that by using thin metal films the excitation of surface plasmons by Si QDs can be further enhanced. Si QDs are found to preferentially excite symmetric thin-film surface plasmons
Non-reciprocal optical reflection from a bidimensional array of subwavelength holes in a metallic film
Using simulations and theoretical arguments we investigate the specular
reflection of a perforated gold film deposited on a glass substrate. A square
lattice of cylindrical holes is assumed to produce the periodic lateral
corrugation needed to hybridize the surface plasmons with radiative states. It
is shown that, contrasting transmission approaches, a knowledge of the
reflection on either side of the film provides separate information on the
gold-vacuum surface plasmons and on the gold-glass interface plasmons. Recent
experimental data on a specific implementation of this system are reexamined;
these show a good agreement between the measured reflections and the
simulations in both directions of incident wave probes. This confirms the
importance of taking into account the reflection asymmetry in the far-field
assessment of surface plasmons properties.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Published versio
Experimental evidence of percolation phase transition in surface plasmons generation
Carrying digital information in traditional copper wires is becoming a major
issue in electronic circuits. Optical connections such as fiber optics offers
unprecedented transfer capacity, but the mismatch between the optical
wavelength and the transistors size drastically reduces the coupling
efficiency. By merging the abilities of photonics and electronics, surface
plasmon photonics, or 'plasmonics' exhibits strong potential. Here, we propose
an original approach to fully understand the nature of surface electrons in
plasmonic systems, by experimentally demonstrating that surface plasmons can be
modeled as a phase of surface waves. First and second order phase transitions,
associated with percolation transitions, have been experimentally observed in
the building process of surface plasmons in lattice of subwavelength apertures.
Percolation theory provides a unified framework for surface plasmons
description
Generation and near-field imaging of Airy surface plasmons
We demonstrate experimentally the generation and near-field imaging of
nondiffracting surface waves - plasmonic Airy beams, propagating on the surface
of a gold metal film. The Airy plasmons are excited by an engineered nanoscale
phase grating, and demonstrate significant beam bending over their propagation.
We show that the observed Airy plasmons exhibit self-healing properties,
suggesting novel applications in plasmonic circuitry and surface optical
manipulation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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