Controlled spatial switching and routing of surface plasmons in designed single-crystalline gold nanostructures

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Abstract

Electron emission microscopy is used to visualize plasmonic routing in gold nano-structures. We show that in single-crystalline gold structures reliable routing can be achieved with polarization switching. The routing is due to the polarization dependence of the photon-to-plasmon coupling, which controls the mode distribution in the plasmonic gold film. We use specifically designed, single-crystalline planar structures. In these structures, the plasmon propagation length is sufficiently large such that significant plasmon power can be delivered to the near-field region around the end tips of the router. Solid state devices based on internal electron excitation and emission processes appear feasible. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Könenkamp, R., Word, R. C., Fitzgerald, J., Nadarajah, A., & Saliba, S. (2012). Controlled spatial switching and routing of surface plasmons in designed single-crystalline gold nanostructures. Applied Physics Letters, 101(14). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4757125

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