668 research outputs found
Plasmons in electrostatically doped graphene
Graphene has raised high expectations as a low-loss plasmonic material in
which the plasmon properties can be controlled via electrostatic doping. Here,
we analyze realistic configurations, which produce inhomogeneous doping, in
contrast to what has been so far assumed in the study of plasmons in
nanostructured graphene. Specifically, we investigate backgated ribbons,
co-planar ribbon pairs placed at opposite potentials, and individual ribbons
subject to a uniform electric field. Plasmons in backgated ribbons and ribbon
pairs are similar to those of uniformly doped ribbons, provided the Fermi
energy is appropriately scaled to compensate for finite-size effects such as
the divergence of the carrier density at the edges. In contrast, the plasmons
of a ribbon exposed to a uniform field exhibit distinct dispersion and spatial
profiles that considerably differ from uniformly doped ribbons. Our results
provide a road map to understand graphene plasmons under realistic
electrostatic doping conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Direct generation of charge carriers in c-Si solar cells due to embedded nanoparticles
It is known that silicon is an indirect band gap material, reducing its
efficiency in photovoltaic applications. Using surface plasmons in metallic
nanoparticles embedded in a solar cell has recently been proposed as a way to
increase the efficiency of thin film silicon solar cells. The dipole mode that
dominates the plasmons in small particles produces an electric field having
Fourier components with all wave numbers. In this work, we show that such a
field creates electron-hole-pairs without phonon assistance, and discuss the
importance of this effect compared to radiation from the particle and losses
due to heating.Comment: 1 figur
Perturbation theory for plasmonic eigenvalues
We develop a perturbative approach for calculating, within the quasistatic
approximation, the shift of surface resonances in response to a deformation of
a dielectric volume. Our strategy is based on the conversion of the homogeneous
system for the potential which determines the plasmonic eigenvalues into an
inhomogeneous system for the potential's derivative with respect to the
deformation strength, and on the exploitation of the corresponding
compatibility condition. The resulting general expression for the first-order
shift is verified for two explicitly solvable cases, and for a realistic
example of a deformed nanosphere. It can be used for scanning the huge
parameter space of possible shape fluctuations with only quite small
computational effort
Statistical properties of spontaneous emission near a rough surface
We study the lifetime of the excited state of an atom or molecule near a
plane surface with a given random surface roughness. In particular, we discuss
the impact of the scattering of surface modes within the rough surface. Our
study is completed by considering the lateral correlation length of the decay
rate and the variance discussing its relation to the C0 correlation
Electrodynamics of superconductors
An alternate set of equations to describe the electrodynamics of
superconductors at a macroscopic level is proposed. These equations resemble
equations originally proposed by the London brothers but later discarded by
them. Unlike the conventional London equations the alternate equations are
relativistically covariant, and they can be understood as arising from the
'rigidity' of the superfluid wave function in a relativistically covariant
microscopic theory. They predict that an internal 'spontaneous' electric field
exists in superconductors, and that externally applied electric fields, both
longitudinal and transverse, are screened over a London penetration length, as
magnetic fields are. The associated longitudinal dielectric function predicts a
much steeper plasmon dispersion relation than the conventional theory, and a
blue shift of the minimum plasmon frequency for small samples. It is argued
that the conventional London equations lead to difficulties that are removed in
the present theory, and that the proposed equations do not contradict any known
experimental facts. Experimental tests are discussed.Comment: Small changes following referee's and editor's comments; to be
published in Phys.Rev.
Long-range surface plasmon polariton excitation at the quantum level
We provide the quantum mechanical description of the excitation of long-range
surface plasmon polaritons (LRSPPs) on thin metallic strips. The excitation
process consists of an attenuated-reflection setup, where efficient
photon-to-LRSPP wavepacket-transfer is shown to be achievable. For calculating
the coupling, we derive the first quantization of LRSPPs in the polaritonic
regime. We study quantum statistics during propagation and characterize the
performance of photon-to-LRSPP quantum state transfer for single-photons,
photon-number states and photonic coherent superposition states.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, RevTeX4; Accepted versio
Analysis of surface waves generated on subwavelength-structured silver films
Using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to analyse the physical-chemical
surface properties of subwavlength structured silver films and
finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) numerical simulations of the optical
response of these structures to plane-wave excitation, we report on the origin
and nature of the persistent surface waves generated by a single slit-groove
motif and recently measured by far-field optical interferometry. The surface
analysis shows that the silver films are free of detectable oxide or sulfide
contaminants, and the numerical simulations show very good agreement with the
results previously reported.Comment: 9 Figure
Scattering of slow-light gap solitons with charges in a two-level medium
The Maxwell-Bloch system describes a quantum two-level medium interacting
with a classical electromagnetic field by mediation of the the population
density. This population density variation is a purely quantum effect which is
actually at the very origin of nonlinearity. The resulting nonlinear coupling
possesses particularly interesting consequences at the resonance (when the
frequency of the excitation is close to the transition frequency of the
two-level medium) as e.g. slow-light gap solitons that result from the
nonlinear instability of the evanescent wave at the boundary. As nonlinearity
couples the different polarizations of the electromagnetic field, the
slow-light gap soliton is shown to experience effective scattering whith
charges in the medium, allowing it for instance to be trapped or reflected.
This scattering process is understood qualitatively as being governed by a
nonlinear Schroedinger model in an external potential related to the charges
(the electrostatic permanent background component of the field).Comment: RevTex, 14 pages with 5 figures, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Theo
Dynamical Casimir-Polder interaction between an atom and surface plasmons
We investigate the time-dependent Casimir-Polder potential of a polarizable
two-level atom placed near a surface of arbitrary material, after a sudden
change in the parameters of the system. Different initial conditions are taken
into account. For an initially bare ground-state atom, the time-dependent
Casimir-Polder energy reveals how the atom is "being dressed" by virtual,
matter-assisted photons. We also study the transient behavior of the
Casimir-Polder interaction between the atom and the surface starting from a
partially dressed state, after an externally induced change in the atomic level
structure or transition dipoles. The Heisenberg equations are solved through an
iterative technique for both atomic and field operators in the medium-assisted
electromagnetic field quantization scheme. We analyze in particular how the
time evolution of the interaction energy depends on the optical properties of
the surface, in particular on the dispersion relationof surface plasmon
polaritons. The physical significance and the limits of validity of the
obtained results are discussed in detail.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Surface plasmon toy-model of a rotating black hole
Recently introduced surface plasmon toy black hole model has been extended in
order to emulate a rotating black hole (Kerr metric). Physical realization of
this model involves a droplet of an optically active liquid on the metal
surface which supports propagation of surface plasmons. Such droplets are shown
to exhibit giant optical activity in the frequency range near the surface
plasmon resonance of a metal-liquid interface.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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