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Tuning of polarized room-temperature thermal radiation based on nanogap plasmon resonance
Author(s) -
Sung-Jun Park,
YoungBin Kim,
YoonJong Moon,
Jinwoo Cho,
Sun-Kyung Kim
Publication year - 2020
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.393013
Subject(s) - materials science , plasmon , optics , optoelectronics , surface plasmon resonance , infrared , surface plasmon , polarization (electrochemistry) , surface plasmon polariton , dielectric , nanoparticle , nanotechnology , physics , chemistry
When a one-dimensional (1D) metal array is coupled to a planar metal mirror with a dielectric gap, localized plasmon resonance is excited inside the gap at a specific polarization of light in free space. Herein, we report on the completely polarized, mid-infrared thermal radiation that is released from gap plasmon resonators with a nanometer-thick dielectric. We fabricated nanogap plasmon resonators with 1D Au or Ni array of various widths (w) using laser interference lithography. An atomic layer deposition process was used to introduce a 10 nm-thick alumina gap between a 1D metal array and a planar metal mirror. It was observed that only for the Au nanogap plasmon resonators, high-amplitude absorption peaks that were attributed to gap plasmon modes with different orders appeared at discrete wavelengths in a polarization-resolved spectrum. In addition, all the pronounced peaks were gradually redshifted with increasing w. At w = 1.2-1.6 µm, the fundamental gap plasmon mode was tuned to the main wavelengths (8-9 µm) of thermal radiation at room temperature (e.g., ∼300 K), which led to polarization-selective camouflage against standard infrared thermal imaging. The results of electromagnetic simulations quantitatively agreed with the measured absorbance spectra in both peak wavelength and amplitude. We believe that these experimental efforts towards achieving radiation/absorption spectra tailored at mid-infrared wavelengths will be further exploited in thermal-radiation harnessed energy devices, spectroscopic sensors, and radiative coolers.

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