Design and implementation of plasmonic cavities in thin metallic films

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
Metals contain a sea of free electrons that are easily driven into collective oscillation by electromagnetic waves. As a result, small metal objects can serve as antennas that strongly scatter light. At the same time, extended metal surfaces have been shown to guide surface plasmons (photons bound to surface charge oscillations) that can confine light to deep sub-wavelength dimensions. Patterned metallic films can combine both the scattering and guiding properties of metals to capture and concentrate light from free space into a photodetector or to control the emission of light from emitting media. We first consider the wide range of functions that can be achieved in directing light emission with the help of smooth metallic films. We then describe how light interacts with patterned metallic films and present a detailed study of the effect of a single metallic groove on the scattering and surface plasmon guiding processes. This has lead to our discovery of new, exciting opportunities for dense optical functionality with non-periodically patterned metallic films. We show that a micronscale structure consisting of just two grooves in a metal film can lead to directional light coupling and wavelength splitting with a contrast ratio of 3:1. Our understanding is then generalized giving rise to a fast, simplified optimization of large non-periodic structures for a desired function. Lastly we consider the efficiency and bandwidth limits of coupling light through sub-wavelength slits for photodetection. We outline a path to efficient, spectrally selective detection which may find application in compact, polarization sensitive, multi-wavelength plasmonic detectors.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic; electronic resource; remote
Extent 1 online resource.
Copyright date 2011
Publication date 2010, c2011; 2010
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Associated with Liu, John, (Photovoltaics engineer)
Associated with Stanford University, Department of Applied Physics
Primary advisor Brongersma, Mark L
Primary advisor Miller, D. A. B
Thesis advisor Brongersma, Mark L
Thesis advisor Miller, D. A. B
Thesis advisor Fan, Shanhui, 1972-
Advisor Fan, Shanhui, 1972-

Subjects

Genre Theses

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility John Liu.
Note Submitted to the Department of Applied Physics.
Thesis Thesis (Ph.D.)--Stanford University, 2011.
Location electronic resource

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2011 by John Liu

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