Programmable and reversible plasmon mode engineering

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Abstract

Plasmonic nanostructures with enhanced localized optical fields as well as narrow linewidths have driven advances in numerous applications. However, the active engineering of ultranarrow resonances across the visible regime-and within a single system-has not yet been demonstrated. This paper describes how aluminum nanoparticle arrays embedded in an elastomeric slab may exhibit high-quality resonances with linewidths as narrow as 3 nm at wavelengths not accessible by conventional plasmonic materials. We exploited stretching to improve and tune simultaneously the optical response of as-fabricated nanoparticle arrays by shifting the diffraction mode relative to single-particle dipolar or quadrupolar resonances. This dynamic modulation of particle-particle spacing enabled either dipolar or quadrupolar latticemodes to be selectively accessed and individually optimized. Programmable plasmon modes offer a robust way to achieve real-time tunable materials for plasmon-enhanced molecular sensing and plasmonic nanolasers and opens new possibilities for integrating with flexible electronics.

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APA

Yang, A., Hryn, A. J., Bourgeois, M. R., Lee, W. K., Hu, J., Schatz, G. C., & Odom, T. W. (2016). Programmable and reversible plasmon mode engineering. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(50), 14201–14206. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1615281113

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