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Optical near-field excitations on plasmonic nanoparticle-based structures
Author(s) -
Stavroula Foteinopoulou,
J.-P. Vigneron,
Cédric Vandenbem
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.15.004253
Subject(s) - plasmon , optics , finite difference time domain method , surface plasmon , polarization (electrochemistry) , near field scanning optical microscope , near and far field , diffraction , materials science , gaussian beam , excitation , surface plasmon resonance , wavelength , electromagnetic field , ray , optoelectronics , optical microscope , physics , nanoparticle , nanotechnology , beam (structure) , scanning electron microscope , chemistry , quantum mechanics
We investigate optical excitations on single silver nanospheres and nanosphere composites with the Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method. Our objective is to achieve polarization control of the enhanced local field, pertinent to SERS applications. We employ dimer and quadrumer structures, which can display broadband and highly confined near-field-intensity enhancement comparable to or exceeding the resonant value of smaller sized isolated spheres. Our results demonstrate that the polarization of the enhanced field can be controlled by the orientation of the multimers in respect to the illumination, rather than the illumination itself. In particular, we report cases where the enhanced field shares the same polarization with the exciting field, and cases where it is predominantly perpendicular to the source field. We call the later phenomenon depolarized enhancement. Furthermore, we study a realizable nanolens based on a tapered self-similar silver nanosphere array. The time evolution of the fields in such structures show conversion of a diffraction limited Gaussian beam to a focused spot, through sequential coupling of the nano-array spheres' Mie-plasmons. For a longitudinally excited nanolens design we observed the formation of an isolated focus with size about one tenth the vacuum wavelength. We believe such nanolens will aid scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM) detection and the excitation of surface plasmon based guiding devices.

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