Abstract
We present results on colors of metal disk arrays viewed under a darkfield microscope and show that the darkfield colors can be manipulated independently of the brightfield colors. We investigate the appearance of colors as disks are clustered to form a new array with double the pitch and a basis of four disks. These structures of aluminum disks on aluminum oxide on aluminum have resonances in the visible spectrum, so by arranging them in small tight clusters, a coupled plasmon resonant mode is produced at shorter wavelengths. This feature causes a reflectance minimum and leads to an increase in the gamut of darkfield colors produced. These colors are tuned by changing the size of the disk and the inter-disk gap within the clusters. Interestingly, the intensities of the reflectance peaks also demonstrate good agreement with the Fourier series coefficients for square waves. Polarization-tunable colors are also demonstrated by designing rectangular arrays that have dissimilar periods along the two orthogonal axes of the array, and a four-level security tag is fabricated that encodes images for viewing under brightfield, darkfield (both x and y polarization), and infrared illumination.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ng, R. J. H., Krishnan, R. V., Wang, H., & Yang, J. K. W. (2020). Darkfield colors from multi-periodic arrays of gap plasmon resonators. Nanophotonics, 9(2), 533–545. https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2019-0414
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.