Nanophotonics with Surface PlasmonsElsevier, 18.12.2006 - 340 Seiten Current developments in optical technologies are being directed toward nanoscale devices with subwavelength dimensions, in which photons are manipulated on the nanoscale. Although light is clearly the fastest means to send information to and from the nanoscale, there is a fundamental incompatibility between light at the microscale and devices and processes at the nanoscale. Nanostructured metals which support surface plasmon modes can concentrate electromagnetic (EM) fields to a small fraction of a wavelength while enhancing local field strengths by several orders of magnitude. For this reason, plasmonic nanostructures can serve as optical couplers across the nano–micro interface: metal–dielectric and metal–semiconductor nanostructures can act as optical nanoantennae and enhance light matter coupling in nanoscale devices. This book describes how one can fully integrate plasmonic nanostructures into dielectric, semiconductor, and molecular photonic devices, for guiding photons across the nano–micro interface and for detecting molecules with unsurpassed sensitivity.·Nanophotonics and Nanoplasmonics·Metamaterials and negative-index materials·Plasmon-enhanced sensing and spectroscopy·Imaging and sensing on the nanoscale·Metal Optics |
Inhalt
Chapter 2 Metal strip and wire waveguides for surface plasmon polaritons | 35 |
Chapter 3 Superresolution microscopy using surface plasmon polaritons | 63 |
Chapter 4 Active plasmonics | 109 |
Chapter 5 Surface plasmons and gain media | 141 |
Chapter 6 Optical superresolution for ultrahigh density optical data storage | 171 |
Chapter 7 Metal stripe surface plasmon waveguides | 191 |
Chapter 8 Biosensing with plasmonic nanoparticles | 219 |
Chapter 9 Thin metaldielectric nanocomposites with a negative index of refraction | 271 |
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| 323 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absorption aggregate antibodies Appl beam Bloch wave Bozhevolnyi Chem coupling cross section decoupling detection dielectric dielectric constant diffraction dispersion relation Ditlbacher Drachev effective refractive index efficiency electric electromagnetic electron emission excitation experimental far-field frequency gallium gold film gold nanoparticles grating guided modes inset intensity interface Krenn laser layer Lett LRSPP mode magnetic metal film metal nanoparticles metamaterial microscope mirror modulation molecules nano nanohole array nanometres nanostructures nanowire negative refractive index Nikolajsen NPPR optical microscope permittivity phase photonic crystal Phys plasmon resonance polariton polymer probe propagation length propagation loss pumping R6G dye radiation Raether Raman Raman scattering reflection resolution sample scattered light sensor SERS Shalaev shown in fig signal Smolyaninov solution spectra spectrum SPP modes SPP propagation SPP waves stripe width structure substrate super-RENS disk super-resolution surface plasmon polaritons surface plasmon resonance thickness transmission wave vector wavelength Weeber Zayats Zheludev
Beliebte Passagen
Seite xiii - Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907-2035 II.
