Plasmon-emitter interactions are of paramount importance in modern
nanoplasmonics and are generally maximal at short emitter-surface separations.
However, when the separation falls below 10-20 nm, the classical theory
progressively deteriorates due to its neglect of quantum mechanical effects
such as nonlocality, electronic spill-out, and Landau damping. Here, we show
how this neglect can be remedied by presenting a unified theoretical treatment
of mesoscopic electrodynamics grounded on the framework of Feibelman
d-parameters. Crucially, our technique naturally incorporates nonclassical
resonance shifts and surface-enabled Landau damping - a nonlocal damping effect
- which have a dramatic impact on the amplitude and spectral distribution of
plasmon-emitter interactions. We consider a broad array of plasmon-emitter
interactions ranging from dipolar and multipolar spontaneous emission
enhancement, to plasmon-assisted energy transfer and enhancement of two-photon
transitions. The formalism presented here gives a complete account of both
plasmons and plasmon-emitter interactions at the nanoscale, constituting a
simple yet rigorous and general platform to incorporate nonclassical effects in
plasmon-empowered nanophotonic phenomena.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure