Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters

Database
Language
Affiliation country
Publication year range
1.
Nano Lett ; 24(3): 929-934, 2024 Jan 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38173237

ABSTRACT

Control of the angular momentum of light is a key technology for next-generation nano-optical devices and optical communications, including quantum communication and encoding. We propose an approach to controllably generate circularly polarized light from a circular hole in a metal film using an electron beam by coherently exciting transition radiation and light scattering from the hole through surface plasmon polaritons. The circularly polarized light generation is confirmed by fully polarimetric four-dimensional cathodoluminescence mapping, where angle-resolved spectra are simultaneously obtained. The obtained intensity and Stokes maps show clear interference fringes as well as almost fully circularly polarized light generation with controllable parities by the electron beam position. By applying this approach to a three-hole system, a vortex field with a phase singularity is visualized in the middle of three holes.

2.
Nano Lett ; 21(15): 6556-6562, 2021 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34314178

ABSTRACT

Valley polarization has recently been adopted in optics, offering robust waveguiding and angular momentum sorting. The success of valley systems in photonic crystals suggests a plasmonic counterpart that can merge topological photonics and topological condensed matter systems, for instance, two-dimensional materials with the enhanced light-matter interaction. However, a valley plasmonic waveguide with a sufficient propagation distance in the near-infrared (NIR) or visible spectral range has so far not been realized due to ohmic loss inside the metal. Here, we employ gap surface plasmons for high index contrasting and realize a wide-bandgap valley plasmonic crystal, allowing waveguiding in the NIR-visible range. The edge mode with a propagation distance of 5.3 µm in the range of 1.31-1.36 eV is experimentally confirmed by visualizing the field distributions with a scanning transmission electron microscope cathodoluminescence technique, suggesting a practical platform for transferring angular momentum between photons and carriers in mesoscopic active devices.

3.
Nano Lett ; 20(1): 592-598, 2020 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31855432

ABSTRACT

Nanoscale gaps between metals can strongly confine electromagnetic fields that enable efficient electromagnetic energy conversion and coupling to nanophotonic structures. In particular, the gap formed by depositing a metallic particle on a metallic substrate produces coupling of localized particle plasmons to propagating surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs). Understanding and controlling the phase of such coupling is essential for the design of devices relying on nanoparticles coupled through SPPs. Here we demonstrate the experimental visualization of the phase associated with the plasmonic field of metallic particle-surface composites through nanoscopically and spectroscopically resolved cathodoluminescence using a scanning transmission electron microscope. Specifically, we study the interference between the substrate transition radiation and the field resulting from out-coupling of SPP excitation, therefore giving rise to angle-, polarization-, and energy-dependent photon emission fringe patterns from which we extract phase information. Our methods should be readily applicable to more complex nanostructures, thus providing direct experimental insight into nanoplasmonic near-fields with potential applications in improving plasmon-based devices.

4.
ACS Nano ; 16(12): 21462-21470, 2022 Dec 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36414014

ABSTRACT

Free-electron-based spectroscopies can reveal the nanoscale optical properties of semiconductor materials and nanophotonic devices with a spatial resolution far beyond the diffraction limit of light. However, the retrieved spatial information is constrained to the excitation space defined by the electron beam position, while information on the delocalization associated with the spatial extension of the probed optical modes in the specimen has so far been missing, despite its relevance in ruling the optical properties of nanostructures. In this study, we demonstrate a cathodoluminescence method that can access both excitation and emission spaces at the nanoscale, illustrating the power of such a simultaneous excitation and emission mapping technique by revealing a subwavelength emission position modulation as well as by visualizing electromagnetic energy transport in nanoplasmonic systems. Besides the fundamental interest of these results, our technique grants us access into previously inaccessible nanoscale optical properties.

5.
ACS Nano ; 15(2): 2219-2228, 2021 Feb 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32845613

ABSTRACT

Circularly polarized light (CPL) is currently receiving much attention as a key ingredient for next-generation information technologies, such as quantum communication and encryption. CPL photon generation used in those applications is commonly realized by coupling achiral optical quantum emitters to chiral nanoantennas. Here, we explore a different strategy consisting in exciting a nanosphere-the ultimate symmetric structure-to produce CPL emission along an arbitrary direction. Specifically, we demonstrate chiral emission from a silicon nanosphere induced by an electron beam based on two different strategies: either shifting the relative phase of degenerate orthogonal dipole modes or interfering electric and magnetic modes. We prove these concepts both theoretically and experimentally by visualizing the phase and polarization using a fully polarimetric four-dimensional cathodoluminescence method. Besides their fundamental interest, our results support the use of free-electron-induced light emission from spherically symmetric systems as a versatile platform for the generation of chiral light with on-demand control over the phase and degree of polarization.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL