Densely packed aluminum-silver nanohelices as an ultra-thin perfect light absorber

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Abstract

Metals have been formed into nanostructures to absorb light with high efficiency through surface plasmon resonances. An ultra-thin plasmonic structure that exhibits strong absorption over wide ranges of wavelengths and angles of incidence is sought. In this work, a nearly perfect plasmonic nanostructure is fabricated using glancing angle deposition. The difference between the morphologies of obliquely deposited aluminum and silver nanohelices is exploited to form a novel three-dimensional structure, which is an aluminum-silver nanohelix array on a pattern-free substrate. With a thickness of only 470 nm, densely distributed nanohelices support rod-to-rod localized surface plasmons for broadband and polarization-independent light extinction. The extinctance remains high over wavelengths from 400 nm to 2000 nm and angles of incidence from 0° to 70°.

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Jen, Y. J., Huang, Y. J., Liu, W. C., & Lin, Y. W. (2017). Densely packed aluminum-silver nanohelices as an ultra-thin perfect light absorber. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep39791

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