Landau-damping-induced limits to light-matter interactions in sub-10-nm planar plasmonic nanocavities.
Opt Express
; 29(24): 39801-39810, 2021 Nov 22.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-34809336
Landau damping has previously been shown to be the dominant nonlocal effect in sub-10nm plasmonic nanostructures, although its effects on the performance of plasmonic nanocavities are still poorly understood. In this work, the effects of Landau damping in sub-10-nm planar plasmonic nanocavities are analyzed theoretically, and it is shown that while Landau damping does not affect the confinement of the cavity modes, it decreases the quality factor 10-fold due to the introduction of extra loss for sub-10nm gap sizes. As compared to purely classical models, this results in a suppression in the Purcell factor by 10 fold, the spontaneous emission rate by almost two orders of magnitude, and the required oscillator strength to achieve strong light-matter coupling by two orders of magnitude as the gap is reduced to â¼0.5nm. Therefore, it is crucial to consider Landau damping in plasmonic-nanocavity design because it breaks the classical norm of achieving higher light-matter interaction strength in sub-10-nm gap-plasmon nanocavities.
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MEDLINE
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2021
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Article