Plasmonics Biographic Information
“Electric and Magnetic Surface Plasmons on
Metamaterials”
Willie Padilla, Boston College
Abstract
An electromagnetic metamaterial is an engineered
composite in which subwavelength features, rather than the chemical makeup
of the constituent materials, control the electromagnetic response.
Electromagnetic metamaterials have experienced enormous excitement and
growth recently due to the demonstration of exotic effects such as
invisibility cloaking, negative refractive index, and perfect focusing. In
fact metamaterials offer an electromagnetic response which has been shown
to be impossible to achieve in naturally occurring materials. Additionally
metamaterials are geometrically scalable meaning they may be tuned to
operate in nearly any sub-optical wavelength band. We present theory,
simulation, and experimental results of metamaterials operating at
terahertz frequencies. Planar electric split ring resonator (eSRR)
metamaterials and their corresponding inverse structures are designed and
characterized computationally and experimentally utilizing finite element
modeling and THz time domain spectroscopy. Complementary ‘plasmonic’
response is observed in transmission. The frequency dependent effective
complex dielectric functions are extracted from the experimental data and,
in combination with simulations to determine the surface current density
and local electric field, provide considerable insight into the
electromagnetic response of our planar metamaterials. Specifically, the
metamaterial resonances observed in the dielectric function for each
structure occur at the peak of the loss function of the complimentary
metamaterial. Specific emphasis is placed on the demonstration of external
control of planar arrays of metamaterials patterned on semiconducting
substrates with terahertz time domain spectroscopy used to characterize
device performance. These structures may find applications for the
construction of needed components operating within the technologically
relevant THz frequency regime.
Bio.
Willie received both MS and PhD degrees in Physics from
UC San Diego. His PhD thesis work, completed in 2004, was for
investigation of the THz, infrared, optical and magneto-optic properties
of novel materials utilizing various spectroscopic methods, including
Fourier transform spectroscopy and ellipsometry. Materials studied include
high temperature superconductors, pyrochlores, and artificial
metamaterials. Willie is an author on the “discovery” paper on
“left-handed” or Negative Index (NI) materials, and the main contributor
to demonstrating artificial magnetic response at THz frequencies. Willie
was a Los Alamos Director’s postdoctoral fellow working in the laboratory
for ultrafast optics in MST-CINT. His postdoctoral work at Los Alamos
focused on terahertz time domain spectroscopy of novel materials. He is
currently an Assistant Professor of Physics at Boston College. Willie’s
research interests are primarily directed towards simulating, fabricating
and measuring metamaterials at THz frequencies and the characterization of
high temperature superconductors. He is an expert in infrared, terahertz
time domain, and magneto-optical spectroscopy.