Imaging of Antiferroelectric Dark Modes in an Inverted Plasmonic Lattice

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Abstract

Plasmonic lattice nanostructures are of technological interest because of their capacity to manipulate light below the diffraction limit. Here, we present a detailed study of dark and bright modes in the visible and near-infrared energy regime of an inverted plasmonic honeycomb lattice by a combination of Au+ focused ion beam lithography with nanometric resolution, optical and electron spectroscopy, and finite-difference time-domain simulations. The lattice consists of slits carved in a gold thin film, exhibiting hotspots and a set of bright and dark modes. We proposed that some of the dark modes detected by electron energy-loss spectroscopy are caused by antiferroelectric arrangements of the slit polarizations with two times the size of the hexagonal unit cell. The plasmonic resonances take place within the 0.5-2 eV energy range, indicating that they could be suitable for a synergistic coupling with excitons in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides materials or for designing nanoscale sensing platforms based on near-field enhancement over a metallic surface.

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Rodríguez-Álvarez, J., Labarta, A., Idrobo, J. C., Dell’Anna, R., Cian, A., Giubertoni, D., … Batlle, X. (2023). Imaging of Antiferroelectric Dark Modes in an Inverted Plasmonic Lattice. ACS Nano, 17(9), 8123–8132. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c11016

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