Hybridization in Three Dimensions: A Novel Route toward
Plasmonic Metamolecules
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Abstract
Plasmonic metamolecules have received
much interest in the last years because they can produce a wide spectrum
of different hybrid optical resonances. Most of the configurations
presented so far, however, considered planar resonators lying on a
dielectric substrate. This typically yields high damping and radiative
losses, which severely limit the performance of the system. Here we
show that these limits can be overcome by considering a 3D arrangement
made from slanted nanorod dimers extruding from a silver baseplate.
This configuration mimics an out-of-plane split ring resonator capable
of a strong near-field interaction at the terminations and a strong
diffractive coupling with nearby nanostructures. Compared to the corresponding
planar counterparts, higher values of electric and magnetic fields
are found (about a factor 10 and a factor 3, respectively). High-quality-factor
resonances (<i>Q</i> ≈ 390) are produced in the mid-IR
as a result of the efficient excitation of collective modes in dimer
arrays