Plasmonics Abstract and Biographic Information
"Field Enhancement and Plasmon Localization in
Aperiodic Deterministic Structures"
Luca Dal Negro
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Boston University
8 Saint Mary’s street, Boston, MA, 02215-2421
Abstract
The control of light-matter
interactions in complex photonic structures without translational
invariance offers the ultimate potential for the creation and manipulation
of light states. Unlike periodically arranged structures (photonic
crystals), deterministically generated aperiodic and fractal
metal/dielectric photonic structures show unique light localization and
transport properties related to an unprecedented degree
of structural complexity. However, unlike aperiodic random media, they can
be generated according to simple mathematical rules and therefore possess
perfect long-range order, enabling reproducible on-chip fabrication of
novel optical devices.
Recently, deterministically-generated
one dimensional aperiodic dielectric structures have been fabricated
[1-3] by stacking together layers of different dielectric constants, A and
B, according to simple mathematical rules, such as the Fibonacci or the
Thue-Morse sequences, which encode a fascinating complexity displayed by
their Fourier transforms (see Fig. 1).
Here we propose for the first time
the use of metal/dielectric 2D structures based on aperiodic order for the
engineering of electromagnetic hot spots on chip-size devices. The
approach is based on the excitation of collective plasmon (SP) resonances
in non-periodic, deterministic chips which can be fabricated by
electron-beam lithography. Periodic one-dimensional SPs waveguides have
been proposed and electromagnetic plasmon coupling in 1D structures has
been intensively investigated in the last 5 years [4,5]
However, despite their large
potential for nanophotonics applications, metal/dielectric one-dimensional
(1D) and two-dimensional (2D) aperiodic structures have not been
investigated so far. Based on both Finite-Difference-Time-Domain (FDTD)
and Finite Element analysis, we report on the design and nanofabrication
of planar plasmonic devices based on surface plasmon-polariton (SPP)
localization and electromagnetic coupling. Our analysis shows that large
field enhancement effects can be achieved in deterministic aperiodic
structures within deep sub-wavelength regions (hot electromagnetic spots).
The use of non-periodic, deterministic 1D and 2D metal
nano-particle arrays represent a convenient approach to manipulate
enhanced local fields on chip-scale devices which can have a large impact
for active nanophotonics applications.
Bio.
Luca Dal Negro received both the Laurea in physics,
summa cum laude, in 1999 and the Ph.D. degree in semiconductor physics
from the University of Trento, Italy, in 2003. After his Ph.D., in 2003 he
joined MIT as a post doctoral associate. Since January 2006 he is
Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering at Boston University.
He manages and conducts research projects on
silicon-based photonic materials and devices, plasmonic structures and
semiconductor laser spectroscopy. His main focus is currently on quantum
dots spectroscopy, complex photonic crystals structures and nano-photonics.
He has authored and coauthored more than 50 technical articles.