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Nanoscale Imaging of Local Few-Femtosecond Near-Field Dynamics within a Single Plasmonic Nanoantenna
Author(s) -
Erik Mårsell,
Arthur Losquin,
Robin Svärd,
Miguel Miranda,
Chen Guo,
Anne Harth,
Eleonora Lorek,
J. Mauritsson,
Cord L. Arnold,
Hongxing Xu,
A. L’Huillier,
Anders Mikkelsen
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b02363
Subject(s) - plasmon , femtosecond , dephasing , ultrashort pulse , materials science , laser , attosecond , optics , nanophotonics , surface plasmon resonance , optoelectronics , photoemission electron microscopy , nanotechnology , physics , nanoparticle , condensed matter physics , electron microscope
The local enhancement of few-cycle laser pulses by plasmonic nanostructures opens up for spatiotemporal control of optical interactions on a nanometer and few-femtosecond scale. However, spatially resolved characterization of few-cycle plasmon dynamics poses a major challenge due to the extreme length and time scales involved. In this Letter, we experimentally demonstrate local variations in the dynamics during the few strongest cycles of plasmon-enhanced fields within individual rice-shaped silver nanoparticles. This was done using 5.5 fs laser pulses in an interferometric time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy setup. The experiments are supported by finite-difference time-domain simulations of similar silver structures. The observed differences in the field dynamics across a single particle do not reflect differences in plasmon resonance frequency or dephasing time. They instead arise from a combination of retardation effects and the coherent superposition between multiple plasmon modes of the particle, inherent to a few-cycle pulse excitation. The ability to detect and predict local variations in the few-femtosecond time evolution of multimode coherent plasmon excitations in rationally synthesized nanoparticles can be used in the tailoring of nanostructures for ultrafast and nonlinear plasmonics.

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