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Surface plasmon polariton

Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) are electromagnetic waves that travel along a metaldielectric or metal–air interface, practically in the infrared or visible-frequency. The term "surface plasmon polariton" explains that the wave involves both charge motion in the metal ("surface plasmon") and electromagnetic waves in the air or dielectric ("polariton").[1]

They are a type of surface wave, guided along the interface in much the same way that light can be guided by an optical fiber. SPPs have a shorter wavelength than light in vacuum at the same frequency (photons).[2] Hence, SPPs can have a higher momentum and local field intensity.[2] Perpendicular to the interface, they have subwavelength-scale confinement. An SPP will propagate along the interface until its energy is lost either to absorption in the metal or scattering into other directions (such as into free space).

Application of SPPs enables subwavelength optics in microscopy and photolithography beyond the diffraction limit. It also enables the first steady-state micro-mechanical measurement of a fundamental property of light itself: the momentum of a photon in a dielectric medium. Other applications are photonic data storage, light generation, and bio-photonics.[2][3][4][5]

Excitation edit

 
Figure 1: (a) Kretschmann and (b) Otto configuration of an Attenuated Total Reflection setup for coupling surface plasmons. In both cases, the surface plasmon propagates along the metal/dielectric interface
 
Figure 2: Grating Coupler for Surface Plasmons. The wave vector is increased by the spatial frequency

SPPs can be excited by both electrons and photons. Excitation by electrons is created by firing electrons into the bulk of a metal.[6] As the electrons scatter, energy is transferred into the bulk plasma. The component of the scattering vector parallel to the surface results in the formation of a surface plasmon polariton.[7]

For a photon to excite an SPP, both must have the same frequency and momentum. However, for a given frequency, a free-space photon has less momentum than an SPP because the two have different dispersion relations (see below). This momentum mismatch is the reason that a free-space photon from air cannot couple directly to an SPP. For the same reason, an SPP on a smooth metal surface cannot emit energy as a free-space photon into the dielectric (if the dielectric is uniform). This incompatibility is analogous to the lack of transmission that occurs during total internal reflection.

Nevertheless, coupling of photons into SPPs can be achieved using a coupling medium such as a prism or grating to match the photon and SPP wave vectors (and thus match their momenta). A prism can be positioned against a thin metal film in the Kretschmann configuration or very close to a metal surface in the Otto configuration (Figure 1). A grating coupler matches the wave vectors by increasing the parallel wave vector component by an amount related to the grating period (Figure 2). This method, while less frequently utilized, is critical to the theoretical understanding of the effect of surface roughness. Moreover, simple isolated surface defects such as a groove, a slit or a corrugation on an otherwise planar surface provide a mechanism by which free-space radiation and SPs can exchange energy and hence couple.

Fields and dispersion relation edit

The properties of an SPP can be derived from Maxwell's equations. We use a coordinate system where the metal–dielectric interface is the   plane, with the metal at   and dielectric at  . The electric and magnetic fields as a function of position   and time t are as follows:[8][9][10]

 
 
 

where

  • n indicates the material (1 for the metal at   or 2 for the dielectric at  );
  • ω is the angular frequency of the waves;
  • the   is + for the metal, − for the dielectric.
  •   are the x- and z-components of the electric field vector,   is the y-component of the magnetic field vector, and the other components ( ) are zero. In other words, SPPs are always TM (transverse magnetic) waves.
  • k is the wave vector; it is a complex vector, and in the case of a lossless SPP, it turns out that the x components are real and the z components are imaginary—the wave oscillates along the x direction and exponentially decays along the z direction.   is always the same for both materials, but   is generally different from  
  •  , where   is the permittivity of material 1 (the metal), and c is the speed of light in vacuum. As discussed below, this can also be written .

A wave of this form satisfies Maxwell's equations only on condition that the following equations also hold:

 

and

 

Solving these two equations, the dispersion relation for a wave propagating on the surface is

 
 
Figure 3: Lossless dispersion curve for surface plasmon polaritons.[a] At low k, the surface plasmon curve (red) approaches the photon curve (blue)

In the free electron model of an electron gas, which neglects attenuation, the metallic dielectric function is[11]

 

where the bulk plasma frequency in SI units is

 

where n is the electron density, e is the charge of the electron, m is the effective mass of the electron and   is the permittivity of free-space. The dispersion relation is plotted in Figure 3. At low k, the SPP behaves like a photon, but as k increases, the dispersion relation bends over and reaches an asymptotic limit called the "surface plasma frequency".[a] Since the dispersion curve lies to the right of the light line, ω = kc, the SPP has a shorter wavelength than free-space radiation such that the out-of-plane component of the SPP wavevector is purely imaginary and exhibits evanescent decay. The surface plasma frequency is the asymptote of this curve, and is given by

 

In the case of air, this result simplifies to

 

If we assume that ε2 is real and ε2 > 0, then it must be true that ε1 < 0, a condition which is satisfied in metals. Electromagnetic waves passing through a metal experience damping due to Ohmic losses and electron-core interactions. These effects show up in as an imaginary component of the dielectric function. The dielectric function of a metal is expressed ε1 = ε1′ + iε1″ where ε1′ and ε1″ are the real and imaginary parts of the dielectric function, respectively. Generally |ε1| >> ε1″ so the wavenumber can be expressed in terms of its real and imaginary components as[8]

 

The wave vector gives us insight into physically meaningful properties of the electromagnetic wave such as its spatial extent and coupling requirements for wave vector matching.

Propagation length and skin depth edit

As an SPP propagates along the surface, it loses energy to the metal due to absorption. The intensity of the surface plasmon decays with the square of the electric field, so at a distance x, the intensity has decreased by a factor of  . The propagation length is defined as the distance for the SPP intensity to decay by a factor of 1/e. This condition is satisfied at a length[12]

 

Likewise, the electric field falls off evanescently perpendicular to the metal surface. At low frequencies, the SPP penetration depth into the metal is commonly approximated using the skin depth formula. In the dielectric, the field will fall off far more slowly. The decay lengths in the metal and dielectric medium can be expressed as[12]

 

where i indicates the medium of propagation. SPPs are very sensitive to slight perturbations within the skin depth and because of this, SPPs are often used to probe inhomogeneities of a surface.

Animations edit

Experimental applications edit

Nanofabricated systems that exploit SPPs demonstrate potential for designing and controlling the propagation of light in matter. In particular, SPPs can be used to channel light efficiently into nanometer scale volumes, leading to direct modification of resonate frequency dispersion properties (substantially shrinking the wavelength of light and the speed of light pulses for example), as well as field enhancements suitable for enabling strong interactions with nonlinear materials. The resulting enhanced sensitivity of light to external parameters (for example, an applied electric field or the dielectric constant of an adsorbed molecular layer) shows great promise for applications in sensing and switching.

Current research is focused on the design, fabrication, and experimental characterization of novel components for measurement and communications based on nanoscale plasmonic effects. These devices include ultra-compact plasmonic interferometers for applications such as biosensing, optical positioning and optical switching, as well as the individual building blocks (plasmon source, waveguide and detector) needed to integrate a high-bandwidth, infrared-frequency plasmonic communications link on a silicon chip.

In addition to building functional devices based on SPPs, it appears feasible to exploit the dispersion characteristics of SPPs traveling in confined metallo-dielectric spaces to create photonic materials with artificially tailored bulk optical characteristics, otherwise known as metamaterials.[5] Artificial SPP modes can be realized in microwave and terahertz frequencies by metamaterials; these are known as spoof surface plasmons.[13][14]

The excitation of SPPs is frequently used in an experimental technique known as surface plasmon resonance (SPR). In SPR, the maximum excitation of surface plasmons are detected by monitoring the reflected power from a prism coupler as a function of incident angle, wavelength or phase.[15]

Surface plasmon-based circuits, including both SPPs and localized plasmon resonances, have been proposed as a means of overcoming the size limitations of photonic circuits for use in high performance data processing nano devices.[16]

The ability to dynamically control the plasmonic properties of materials in these nano-devices is key to their development. A new approach that uses plasmon-plasmon interactions has been demonstrated recently. Here the bulk plasmon resonance is induced or suppressed to manipulate the propagation of light.[17] This approach has been shown to have a high potential for nanoscale light manipulation and the development of a fully CMOS- compatible electro-optical plasmonic modulator.

CMOS compatible electro-optic plasmonic modulators will be key components in chip-scale photonic circuits.[18]

In surface second harmonic generation, the second harmonic signal is proportional to the square of the electric field. The electric field is stronger at the interface because of the surface plasmon resulting in a non-linear optical effect. This larger signal is often exploited to produce a stronger second harmonic signal.[19]

The wavelength and intensity of the plasmon-related absorption and emission peaks are affected by molecular adsorption that can be used in molecular sensors. For example, a fully operational prototype device detecting casein in milk has been fabricated. The device is based on monitoring changes in plasmon-related absorption of light by a gold layer.[20]

Materials used edit

Surface plasmon polaritons can only exist at the interface between a positive-permittivity material and a negative-permittivity material.[21] The positive-permittivity material, often called the dielectric material, can be any transparent material such as air or (for visible light) glass. The negative-permittivity material, often called the plasmonic material,[22] may be a metal or other material. It is more critical, as it tends to have a large effect on the wavelength, absorption length, and other properties of the SPP. Some plasmonic materials are discussed next.

Metals edit

For visible and near-infrared light, the only plasmonic materials are metals, due to their abundance of free electrons,[22] which leads to a high plasma frequency. (Materials have negative real permittivity only below their plasma frequency.)

Unfortunately, metals suffer from ohmic losses that can degrade the performance of plasmonic devices. The need for lower loss has fueled research aimed at developing new materials for plasmonics[22][23][24] and optimizing the deposition conditions of existing materials.[25] Both the loss and polarizability of a material affect its optical performance. The quality factor   for a SPP is defined as  .[24] The table below shows the quality factors and SPP propagation lengths for four common plasmonic metals; Al, Ag, Au and Cu deposited by thermal evaporation under optimized conditions.[25] The quality factors and SPP propagation lengths were calculated using the optical data from the Al, Ag, Au and Cu films.[10]

Wavelength Regime Metal    
Ultraviolet (280 nm) Al 0.07 2.5
Visible (650 nm) Ag 1.2 84
Cu 0.42 24
Au 0.4 20
Near-Infrared (1000 nm) Ag 2.2 340
Cu 1.1 190
Au 1.1 190
Telecom (1550 nm) Ag 5 1200
Cu 3.4 820
Au 3.2 730

Silver exhibits the lowest losses of current materials in both the visible, near-infrared (NIR) and telecom wavelengths.[25] Gold and copper perform equally well in the visible and NIR with copper having a slight advantage at telecom wavelengths. Gold has the advantage over both silver and copper of being chemically stable in natural environments making it well suited for plasmonic biosensors.[26] However, an interband transition at ~470 nm greatly increases the losses in gold at wavelengths below 600 nm.[27] Aluminum is the best plasmonic material in the ultraviolet regime (< 330 nm) and is also CMOS compatible along with copper.

Other materials edit

The fewer electrons a material has, the lower (i.e. longer-wavelength) its plasma frequency becomes. Therefore, at infrared and longer wavelengths, various other plasmonic materials also exist besides metals.[22] These include transparent conducting oxides, which have typical plasma frequency in the NIR-SWIR infrared range.[28] At longer wavelengths, semiconductors may also be plasmonic.

Some materials have negative permittivity at certain infrared wavelengths related to phonons rather than plasmons (so-called reststrahlen bands). The resulting waves have the same optical properties as surface plasmon polaritons, but are called by a different term, surface phonon polaritons.

Effects of roughness edit

In order to understand the effect of roughness on SPPs, it is beneficial to first understand how a SPP is coupled by a grating Figure2. When a photon is incident on a surface, the wave vector of the photon in the dielectric material is smaller than that of the SPP. In order for the photon to couple into a SPP, the wave vector must increase by  . The grating harmonics of a periodic grating provide additional momentum parallel to the supporting interface to match the terms.

 

where   is the wave vector of the grating,   is the angle of incidence of the incoming photon, a is the grating period, and n is an integer.

Rough surfaces can be thought of as the superposition of many gratings of different periodicities. Kretschmann proposed[29] that a statistical correlation function be defined for a rough surface

 

where   is the height above the mean surface height at the position  , and   is the area of integration. Assuming that the statistical correlation function is Gaussian of the form

 

where   is the root mean square height,   is the distance from the point  , and   is the correlation length, then the Fourier transform of the correlation function is

 

where   is a measure of the amount of each spatial frequency   which help couple photons into a surface plasmon.

If the surface only has one Fourier component of roughness (i.e. the surface profile is sinusoidal), then the   is discrete and exists only at  , resulting in a single narrow set of angles for coupling. If the surface contains many Fourier components, then coupling becomes possible at multiple angles. For a random surface,   becomes continuous and the range of coupling angles broadens.

As stated earlier, SPPs are non-radiative. When a SPP travels along a rough surface, it usually becomes radiative due to scattering. The Surface Scattering Theory of light suggests that the scattered intensity   per solid angle   per incident intensity   is[30]

 

where   is the radiation pattern from a single dipole at the metal/dielectric interface. If surface plasmons are excited in the Kretschmann geometry and the scattered light is observed in the plane of incidence (Fig. 4), then the dipole function becomes

 

with

 

where   is the polarization angle and   is the angle from the z-axis in the xz-plane. Two important consequences come out of these equations. The first is that if   (s-polarization), then   and the scattered light  . Secondly, the scattered light has a measurable profile which is readily correlated to the roughness. This topic is treated in greater detail in reference.[30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b This lossless dispersion relation neglects the effects of damping factors, such as the intrinsic losses in metals. For lossy cases, the dispersion curve backbends after the reaching the surface plasmon frequency instead of asymptotically increasing.[31][32]

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Ebbesen, T. W.; Lezec, H. J.; Ghaemi, H. F.; Thio, T.; Wolff, P. A. (1998). "Extraordinary optical transmission through sub-wavelength hole arrays" (PDF). Nature. 391 (6668): 667. Bibcode:1998Natur.391..667E. doi:10.1038/35570. S2CID 205024396.
  • Hendry, E.; Garcia-Vidal, F.; Martin-Moreno, L.; Rivas, J.; Bonn, M.; Hibbins, A.; Lockyear, M. (2008). "Optical Control over Surface-Plasmon-Polariton-Assisted THz Transmission through a Slit Aperture" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 100 (12): 123901. Bibcode:2008PhRvL.100l3901H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.100.123901. hdl:10036/33196. PMID 18517865. Free PDF download.
  • Barnes, William L.; Dereux, Alain; Ebbesen, Thomas W. (2003). (PDF). Nature. 424 (6950): 824–30. Bibcode:2003Natur.424..824B. doi:10.1038/nature01937. PMID 12917696. S2CID 116017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-11. Free PDF download.
  • Pitarke, J M; Silkin, V M; Chulkov, E V; Echenique, P M (2007). "Theory of surface plasmons and surface-plasmon polaritons" (PDF). Reports on Progress in Physics. 70 (1): 1. arXiv:cond-mat/0611257. Bibcode:2007RPPh...70....1P. doi:10.1088/0034-4885/70/1/R01. S2CID 46471088. Free PDF download.

External links edit

  • White, Justin (March 19, 2007). "Surface Plasmon Polaritons" (Online). Stanford University. Physics department. "Submitted as coursework for AP272. Winter 2007".

surface, plasmon, polariton, spps, electromagnetic, waves, that, travel, along, metal, dielectric, metal, interface, practically, infrared, visible, frequency, term, surface, plasmon, polariton, explains, that, wave, involves, both, charge, motion, metal, surf. Surface plasmon polaritons SPPs are electromagnetic waves that travel along a metal dielectric or metal air interface practically in the infrared or visible frequency The term surface plasmon polariton explains that the wave involves both charge motion in the metal surface plasmon and electromagnetic waves in the air or dielectric polariton 1 They are a type of surface wave guided along the interface in much the same way that light can be guided by an optical fiber SPPs have a shorter wavelength than light in vacuum at the same frequency photons 2 Hence SPPs can have a higher momentum and local field intensity 2 Perpendicular to the interface they have subwavelength scale confinement An SPP will propagate along the interface until its energy is lost either to absorption in the metal or scattering into other directions such as into free space Application of SPPs enables subwavelength optics in microscopy and photolithography beyond the diffraction limit It also enables the first steady state micro mechanical measurement of a fundamental property of light itself the momentum of a photon in a dielectric medium Other applications are photonic data storage light generation and bio photonics 2 3 4 5 Contents 1 Excitation 2 Fields and dispersion relation 3 Propagation length and skin depth 4 Animations 5 Experimental applications 6 Materials used 6 1 Metals 6 2 Other materials 7 Effects of roughness 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksExcitation edit nbsp Figure 1 a Kretschmann and b Otto configuration of an Attenuated Total Reflection setup for coupling surface plasmons In both cases the surface plasmon propagates along the metal dielectric interface nbsp Figure 2 Grating Coupler for Surface Plasmons The wave vector is increased by the spatial frequency SPPs can be excited by both electrons and photons Excitation by electrons is created by firing electrons into the bulk of a metal 6 As the electrons scatter energy is transferred into the bulk plasma The component of the scattering vector parallel to the surface results in the formation of a surface plasmon polariton 7 For a photon to excite an SPP both must have the same frequency and momentum However for a given frequency a free space photon has less momentum than an SPP because the two have different dispersion relations see below This momentum mismatch is the reason that a free space photon from air cannot couple directly to an SPP For the same reason an SPP on a smooth metal surface cannot emit energy as a free space photon into the dielectric if the dielectric is uniform This incompatibility is analogous to the lack of transmission that occurs during total internal reflection Nevertheless coupling of photons into SPPs can be achieved using a coupling medium such as a prism or grating to match the photon and SPP wave vectors and thus match their momenta A prism can be positioned against a thin metal film in the Kretschmann configuration or very close to a metal surface in the Otto configuration Figure 1 A grating coupler matches the wave vectors by increasing the parallel wave vector component by an amount related to the grating period Figure 2 This method while less frequently utilized is critical to the theoretical understanding of the effect of surface roughness Moreover simple isolated surface defects such as a groove a slit or a corrugation on an otherwise planar surface provide a mechanism by which free space radiation and SPs can exchange energy and hence couple Fields and dispersion relation editThe properties of an SPP can be derived from Maxwell s equations We use a coordinate system where the metal dielectric interface is the z 0 displaystyle z 0 nbsp plane with the metal at z lt 0 displaystyle z lt 0 nbsp and dielectric at z gt 0 displaystyle z gt 0 nbsp The electric and magnetic fields as a function of position x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp and time t are as follows 8 9 10 E x n x y z t E 0 e i k x x i k z n z i w t displaystyle E x n x y z t E 0 e ik x x ik z n z i omega t nbsp E z n x y z t E 0 k x k z n e i k x x i k z n z i w t displaystyle E z n x y z t pm E 0 frac k x k z n e ik x x ik z n z i omega t nbsp H y n x y z t H 0 e i k x x i k z n z i w t displaystyle H y n x y z t H 0 e ik x x ik z n z i omega t nbsp where n indicates the material 1 for the metal at z lt 0 displaystyle z lt 0 nbsp or 2 for the dielectric at z gt 0 displaystyle z gt 0 nbsp w is the angular frequency of the waves the displaystyle pm nbsp is for the metal for the dielectric E x E z displaystyle E x E z nbsp are the x and z components of the electric field vector H y displaystyle H y nbsp is the y component of the magnetic field vector and the other components E y H x H z displaystyle E y H x H z nbsp are zero In other words SPPs are always TM transverse magnetic waves k is the wave vector it is a complex vector and in the case of a lossless SPP it turns out that the x components are real and the z components are imaginary the wave oscillates along the x direction and exponentially decays along the z direction k x displaystyle k x nbsp is always the same for both materials but k z 1 displaystyle k z 1 nbsp is generally different from k z 2 displaystyle k z 2 nbsp H 0 E 0 e 1 w k z 1 c displaystyle frac H 0 E 0 frac varepsilon 1 omega k z 1 c nbsp where e 1 displaystyle varepsilon 1 nbsp is the permittivity of material 1 the metal and c is the speed of light in vacuum As discussed below this can also be writtenH 0 E 0 e 2 w k z 2 c displaystyle frac H 0 E 0 frac varepsilon 2 omega k z 2 c nbsp A wave of this form satisfies Maxwell s equations only on condition that the following equations also hold k z 1 e 1 k z 2 e 2 0 displaystyle frac k z1 varepsilon 1 frac k z2 varepsilon 2 0 nbsp and k x 2 k z n 2 e n w c 2 n 1 2 displaystyle k x 2 k zn 2 varepsilon n left frac omega c right 2 qquad n 1 2 nbsp Solving these two equations the dispersion relation for a wave propagating on the surface is k x w c e 1 e 2 e 1 e 2 1 2 displaystyle k x frac omega c left frac varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 right 1 2 nbsp nbsp Figure 3 Lossless dispersion curve for surface plasmon polaritons a At low k the surface plasmon curve red approaches the photon curve blue In the free electron model of an electron gas which neglects attenuation the metallic dielectric function is 11 e w 1 w P 2 w 2 displaystyle varepsilon omega 1 frac omega rm P 2 omega 2 nbsp where the bulk plasma frequency in SI units is w P n e 2 e 0 m displaystyle omega rm P sqrt frac ne 2 varepsilon 0 m nbsp where n is the electron density e is the charge of the electron m is the effective mass of the electron and e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 nbsp is the permittivity of free space The dispersion relation is plotted in Figure 3 At low k the SPP behaves like a photon but as k increases the dispersion relation bends over and reaches an asymptotic limit called the surface plasma frequency a Since the dispersion curve lies to the right of the light line w k c the SPP has a shorter wavelength than free space radiation such that the out of plane component of the SPP wavevector is purely imaginary and exhibits evanescent decay The surface plasma frequency is the asymptote of this curve and is given by w S P w P 1 e 2 displaystyle omega rm SP omega rm P sqrt 1 varepsilon 2 nbsp In the case of air this result simplifies to w S P w P 2 displaystyle omega rm SP omega rm P sqrt 2 nbsp If we assume that e2 is real and e2 gt 0 then it must be true that e1 lt 0 a condition which is satisfied in metals Electromagnetic waves passing through a metal experience damping due to Ohmic losses and electron core interactions These effects show up in as an imaginary component of the dielectric function The dielectric function of a metal is expressed e1 e1 i e1 where e1 and e1 are the real and imaginary parts of the dielectric function respectively Generally e1 gt gt e1 so the wavenumber can be expressed in terms of its real and imaginary components as 8 k x k x i k x w c e 1 e 2 e 1 e 2 1 2 i w c e 1 e 2 e 1 e 2 3 2 e 1 2 e 1 2 displaystyle k x k x ik x left frac omega c left frac varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 right 1 2 right i left frac omega c left frac varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 right 3 2 frac varepsilon 1 2 varepsilon 1 2 right nbsp The wave vector gives us insight into physically meaningful properties of the electromagnetic wave such as its spatial extent and coupling requirements for wave vector matching Propagation length and skin depth editAs an SPP propagates along the surface it loses energy to the metal due to absorption The intensity of the surface plasmon decays with the square of the electric field so at a distance x the intensity has decreased by a factor of exp 2 k x x textstyle exp 2k x x nbsp The propagation length is defined as the distance for the SPP intensity to decay by a factor of 1 e This condition is satisfied at a length 12 L 1 2 k x displaystyle L frac 1 2k x nbsp Likewise the electric field falls off evanescently perpendicular to the metal surface At low frequencies the SPP penetration depth into the metal is commonly approximated using the skin depth formula In the dielectric the field will fall off far more slowly The decay lengths in the metal and dielectric medium can be expressed as 12 z i l 2 p e 1 e 2 e i 2 1 2 displaystyle z i frac lambda 2 pi left frac varepsilon 1 varepsilon 2 varepsilon i 2 right 1 2 nbsp where i indicates the medium of propagation SPPs are very sensitive to slight perturbations within the skin depth and because of this SPPs are often used to probe inhomogeneities of a surface Animations edit nbsp The electric field E field of an SPP at the silver air interface at the frequency where the free space wavelength is 370 nm The animation shows how the E field varies over an optical cycle The permittivity of silver at this frequency is 2 6 0 6i The picture is 0 3 370 nm across horizontally the SPP wavelength is much smaller than the free space wavelength nbsp The E field of an SPP at the silver air interface at a much lower frequency corresponding to a free space wavelength of 10mm At this frequency the silver behaves approximately as a perfect electric conductor and the SPP is called a Sommerfeld Zenneck wave with almost the same wavelength as the free space wavelength The permittivity of silver at this frequency is 2700 1400i The picture is 6 mm across horizontally Experimental applications editNanofabricated systems that exploit SPPs demonstrate potential for designing and controlling the propagation of light in matter In particular SPPs can be used to channel light efficiently into nanometer scale volumes leading to direct modification of resonate frequency dispersion properties substantially shrinking the wavelength of light and the speed of light pulses for example as well as field enhancements suitable for enabling strong interactions with nonlinear materials The resulting enhanced sensitivity of light to external parameters for example an applied electric field or the dielectric constant of an adsorbed molecular layer shows great promise for applications in sensing and switching Current research is focused on the design fabrication and experimental characterization of novel components for measurement and communications based on nanoscale plasmonic effects These devices include ultra compact plasmonic interferometers for applications such as biosensing optical positioning and optical switching as well as the individual building blocks plasmon source waveguide and detector needed to integrate a high bandwidth infrared frequency plasmonic communications link on a silicon chip In addition to building functional devices based on SPPs it appears feasible to exploit the dispersion characteristics of SPPs traveling in confined metallo dielectric spaces to create photonic materials with artificially tailored bulk optical characteristics otherwise known as metamaterials 5 Artificial SPP modes can be realized in microwave and terahertz frequencies by metamaterials these are known as spoof surface plasmons 13 14 The excitation of SPPs is frequently used in an experimental technique known as surface plasmon resonance SPR In SPR the maximum excitation of surface plasmons are detected by monitoring the reflected power from a prism coupler as a function of incident angle wavelength or phase 15 Surface plasmon based circuits including both SPPs and localized plasmon resonances have been proposed as a means of overcoming the size limitations of photonic circuits for use in high performance data processing nano devices 16 The ability to dynamically control the plasmonic properties of materials in these nano devices is key to their development A new approach that uses plasmon plasmon interactions has been demonstrated recently Here the bulk plasmon resonance is induced or suppressed to manipulate the propagation of light 17 This approach has been shown to have a high potential for nanoscale light manipulation and the development of a fully CMOS compatible electro optical plasmonic modulator CMOS compatible electro optic plasmonic modulators will be key components in chip scale photonic circuits 18 In surface second harmonic generation the second harmonic signal is proportional to the square of the electric field The electric field is stronger at the interface because of the surface plasmon resulting in a non linear optical effect This larger signal is often exploited to produce a stronger second harmonic signal 19 The wavelength and intensity of the plasmon related absorption and emission peaks are affected by molecular adsorption that can be used in molecular sensors For example a fully operational prototype device detecting casein in milk has been fabricated The device is based on monitoring changes in plasmon related absorption of light by a gold layer 20 Materials used editSurface plasmon polaritons can only exist at the interface between a positive permittivity material and a negative permittivity material 21 The positive permittivity material often called the dielectric material can be any transparent material such as air or for visible light glass The negative permittivity material often called the plasmonic material 22 may be a metal or other material It is more critical as it tends to have a large effect on the wavelength absorption length and other properties of the SPP Some plasmonic materials are discussed next Metals edit For visible and near infrared light the only plasmonic materials are metals due to their abundance of free electrons 22 which leads to a high plasma frequency Materials have negative real permittivity only below their plasma frequency Unfortunately metals suffer from ohmic losses that can degrade the performance of plasmonic devices The need for lower loss has fueled research aimed at developing new materials for plasmonics 22 23 24 and optimizing the deposition conditions of existing materials 25 Both the loss and polarizability of a material affect its optical performance The quality factor Q S P P displaystyle Q SPP nbsp for a SPP is defined as e 2 e displaystyle frac varepsilon 2 varepsilon nbsp 24 The table below shows the quality factors and SPP propagation lengths for four common plasmonic metals Al Ag Au and Cu deposited by thermal evaporation under optimized conditions 25 The quality factors and SPP propagation lengths were calculated using the optical data from the Al Ag Au and Cu films 10 Wavelength Regime Metal Q S P P 10 3 displaystyle Q SPP times 10 3 nbsp L S P P m m displaystyle L SPP mu m nbsp Ultraviolet 280 nm Al 0 07 2 5 Visible 650 nm Ag 1 2 84 Cu 0 42 24 Au 0 4 20 Near Infrared 1000 nm Ag 2 2 340 Cu 1 1 190 Au 1 1 190 Telecom 1550 nm Ag 5 1200 Cu 3 4 820 Au 3 2 730 Silver exhibits the lowest losses of current materials in both the visible near infrared NIR and telecom wavelengths 25 Gold and copper perform equally well in the visible and NIR with copper having a slight advantage at telecom wavelengths Gold has the advantage over both silver and copper of being chemically stable in natural environments making it well suited for plasmonic biosensors 26 However an interband transition at 470 nm greatly increases the losses in gold at wavelengths below 600 nm 27 Aluminum is the best plasmonic material in the ultraviolet regime lt 330 nm and is also CMOS compatible along with copper Other materials edit The fewer electrons a material has the lower i e longer wavelength its plasma frequency becomes Therefore at infrared and longer wavelengths various other plasmonic materials also exist besides metals 22 These include transparent conducting oxides which have typical plasma frequency in the NIR SWIR infrared range 28 At longer wavelengths semiconductors may also be plasmonic Some materials have negative permittivity at certain infrared wavelengths related to phonons rather than plasmons so called reststrahlen bands The resulting waves have the same optical properties as surface plasmon polaritons but are called by a different term surface phonon polaritons Effects of roughness editIn order to understand the effect of roughness on SPPs it is beneficial to first understand how a SPP is coupled by a grating Figure2 When a photon is incident on a surface the wave vector of the photon in the dielectric material is smaller than that of the SPP In order for the photon to couple into a SPP the wave vector must increase by D k k S P k x photon displaystyle Delta k k SP k x text photon nbsp The grating harmonics of a periodic grating provide additional momentum parallel to the supporting interface to match the terms k S P P k x photon n k grating w c sin 8 0 n 2 p a displaystyle k SPP k x text photon pm n k text grating frac omega c sin theta 0 pm n frac 2 pi a nbsp where k grating displaystyle k text grating nbsp is the wave vector of the grating 8 0 displaystyle theta 0 nbsp is the angle of incidence of the incoming photon a is the grating period and n is an integer Rough surfaces can be thought of as the superposition of many gratings of different periodicities Kretschmann proposed 29 that a statistical correlation function be defined for a rough surface G x y 1 A A z x y z x x y y d x d y displaystyle G x y frac 1 A int A z x y z x x y y dx dy nbsp where z x y displaystyle z x y nbsp is the height above the mean surface height at the position x y displaystyle x y nbsp and A displaystyle A nbsp is the area of integration Assuming that the statistical correlation function is Gaussian of the form G x y d 2 exp r 2 s 2 displaystyle G x y delta 2 exp left frac r 2 sigma 2 right nbsp where d displaystyle delta nbsp is the root mean square height r displaystyle r nbsp is the distance from the point x y displaystyle x y nbsp and s displaystyle sigma nbsp is the correlation length then the Fourier transform of the correlation function is s k surf 2 1 4 p s 2 d 2 exp s 2 k surf 2 4 displaystyle s k text surf 2 frac 1 4 pi sigma 2 delta 2 exp left frac sigma 2 k text surf 2 4 right nbsp where s displaystyle s nbsp is a measure of the amount of each spatial frequency k surf displaystyle k text surf nbsp which help couple photons into a surface plasmon If the surface only has one Fourier component of roughness i e the surface profile is sinusoidal then the s displaystyle s nbsp is discrete and exists only at k 2 p a displaystyle k frac 2 pi a nbsp resulting in a single narrow set of angles for coupling If the surface contains many Fourier components then coupling becomes possible at multiple angles For a random surface s displaystyle s nbsp becomes continuous and the range of coupling angles broadens As stated earlier SPPs are non radiative When a SPP travels along a rough surface it usually becomes radiative due to scattering The Surface Scattering Theory of light suggests that the scattered intensity d I displaystyle dI nbsp per solid angle d W displaystyle d Omega nbsp per incident intensity I 0 displaystyle I 0 nbsp is 30 d I d W I 0 4 e 0 cos 8 0 p 4 l 4 t 012 p 2 W 2 s k surf 2 displaystyle frac dI d Omega I 0 frac 4 sqrt varepsilon 0 cos theta 0 frac pi 4 lambda 4 t 012 p 2 W 2 s k text surf 2 nbsp where W 2 displaystyle W 2 nbsp is the radiation pattern from a single dipole at the metal dielectric interface If surface plasmons are excited in the Kretschmann geometry and the scattered light is observed in the plane of incidence Fig 4 then the dipole function becomes W 2 A 8 e 1 sin 2 ps 1 sin 2 8 e 1 1 2 sin 8 2 displaystyle W 2 A theta varepsilon 1 sin 2 psi 1 sin 2 theta varepsilon 1 1 2 sin theta 2 nbsp with A 8 e 1 e 1 1 e 1 1 4 1 tan 8 e 1 displaystyle A theta varepsilon 1 frac varepsilon 1 1 varepsilon 1 1 frac 4 1 tan theta varepsilon 1 nbsp where ps displaystyle psi nbsp is the polarization angle and 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the angle from the z axis in the xz plane Two important consequences come out of these equations The first is that if ps 0 displaystyle psi 0 nbsp s polarization then W 2 0 displaystyle W 2 0 nbsp and the scattered light d I d W I 0 0 displaystyle frac dI d Omega I 0 0 nbsp Secondly the scattered light has a measurable profile which is readily correlated to the roughness This topic is treated in greater detail in reference 30 See also editDyakonov surface waves Graphene plasmonics Localized surface plasmon Plasmonic lens Superlens Surface plasmon Surface plasmon resonance Surface waveNotes edit a b This lossless dispersion relation neglects the effects of damping factors such as the intrinsic losses in metals For lossy cases the dispersion curve backbends after the reaching the surface plasmon frequency instead of asymptotically increasing 31 32 References edit S Zeng Baillargeat Dominique Ho Ho Pui Yong Ken Tye et al 2014 Nanomaterials enhanced surface plasmon resonance for biological and chemical sensing applications PDF Chemical Society Reviews 43 10 3426 3452 doi 10 1039 C3CS60479A hdl 10220 18851 PMID 24549396 a b c NIST researchers Nanofabrication Research Group 2009 08 20 Three Dimensional Plasmonic Metamaterials National Institute of Science and Technology Retrieved 2011 02 15 NIST researchers Nanofabrication Research Group 2010 02 11 Opto mechanical Devices for Measuring Nanoplasmonic Metamaterials National Institute of Science and Technology Retrieved 2011 02 15 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Three Dimensional Plasmonic Metamaterials National Institute of Standards and Technology Yarris Lynn 2009 08 20 GRIN Plasmonics Online news release U S Department of Energy National Laboratory Operated by the University of California Retrieved 2011 02 15 Barnes William L Dereux Alain Ebbesen Thomas W 2003 Surface plasmon subwavelength optics Nature 424 6950 824 30 Bibcode 2003Natur 424 824B doi 10 1038 nature01937 PMID 12917696 S2CID 116017 Huidobro Paloma A Nesterov Maxim L Martin Moreno Luis Garcia Vidal Francisco J 2010 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S2CID 16887413 Boltasseva A Atwater H A 2011 Low Loss Plasmonic Metamaterials Science 331 6015 290 291 Bibcode 2011Sci 331 290B doi 10 1126 science 1198258 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 21252335 S2CID 206530073 a b Blaber M G Arnold M D Ford M J 2010 A review of the optical properties of alloys and intermetallics for plasmonics Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 22 14 143201 arXiv 1001 4867 Bibcode 2010JPCM 22n3201B doi 10 1088 0953 8984 22 14 143201 ISSN 0953 8984 PMID 21389523 S2CID 26320849 a b c McPeak Kevin M Jayanti Sriharsha V Kress Stephan J P Meyer Stefan Iotti Stelio Rossinelli Aurelio Norris David J 2015 Plasmonic Films Can Easily Be Better Rules and Recipes ACS Photonics 2 3 326 333 doi 10 1021 ph5004237 ISSN 2330 4022 PMC 4416469 PMID 25950012 Homola Jir 2003 Present and future of surface plasmon resonance biosensors Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 377 3 528 539 doi 10 1007 s00216 003 2101 0 ISSN 1618 2642 PMID 12879189 S2CID 14370505 Etchegoin P G Le Ru E C Meyer M 2006 An analytic model for the optical properties of gold The Journal of Chemical Physics 125 16 164705 Bibcode 2006JChPh 125p4705E doi 10 1063 1 2360270 ISSN 0021 9606 PMID 17092118 Dominici L Michelotti F Brown TM et al 2009 Plasmon polaritons in the near infrared on fluorine doped tin oxide films Optics Express 17 12 10155 67 Bibcode 2009OExpr 1710155D doi 10 1364 OE 17 010155 PMID 19506669 Kretschmann E April 1974 Die Bestimmung der Oberflachenrauhigkeit dunner Schichten durch Messung der Winkelabhangigkeit der Streustrahlung von Oberflachenplasmaschwingungen Optics Communications in German 10 4 353 356 Bibcode 1974OptCo 10 353K doi 10 1016 0030 4018 74 90362 9 a b Kretschmann E 1972 The angular dependence and the polarisation of light emitted by surface plasmons on metals due to roughness Optics Communications 5 5 331 336 Bibcode 1972OptCo 5 331K doi 10 1016 0030 4018 72 90026 0 Arakawa E T Williams M W Hamm R N Ritchie R H 29 October 1973 Effect of Damping on Surface Plasmon Dispersion Physical Review Letters 31 18 1127 1129 Bibcode 1973PhRvL 31 1127A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 31 1127 Maier Stefan A 2007 Plasmonics Fundamentals and Applications New York Springer Publishing ISBN 978 0 387 33150 8 Further reading editEbbesen T W Lezec H J Ghaemi H F Thio T Wolff P A 1998 Extraordinary optical transmission through sub wavelength hole arrays PDF Nature 391 6668 667 Bibcode 1998Natur 391 667E doi 10 1038 35570 S2CID 205024396 Hendry E Garcia Vidal F Martin Moreno L Rivas J Bonn M Hibbins A Lockyear M 2008 Optical Control over Surface Plasmon Polariton Assisted THz Transmission through a Slit Aperture PDF Physical Review Letters 100 12 123901 Bibcode 2008PhRvL 100l3901H doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 100 123901 hdl 10036 33196 PMID 18517865 Free PDF download Barnes William L Dereux Alain Ebbesen Thomas W 2003 Surface plasmon subwavelength optics PDF Nature 424 6950 824 30 Bibcode 2003Natur 424 824B doi 10 1038 nature01937 PMID 12917696 S2CID 116017 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 11 Free PDF download Pitarke J M Silkin V M Chulkov E V Echenique P M 2007 Theory of surface plasmons and surface plasmon polaritons PDF Reports on Progress in Physics 70 1 1 arXiv cond mat 0611257 Bibcode 2007RPPh 70 1P doi 10 1088 0034 4885 70 1 R01 S2CID 46471088 Free PDF download External links editWhite Justin March 19 2007 Surface Plasmon Polaritons Online Stanford University Physics department Submitted as coursework for AP272 Winter 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Surface plasmon polariton amp oldid 1197845555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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