Manipulating Light-Matter Interactions in Plasmonic Nanoparticle Lattices

被引:94
|
作者
Wang, Danqing [1 ]
Guan, Jun [1 ]
Hu, Jingtian [2 ]
Bourgeois, Marc R. [3 ]
Odom, Teri W. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Univ, Grad Program Appl Phys, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
[2] Northwestern Univ, Dept Mat Sci & Engn, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
[3] Northwestern Univ, Dept Chem, 2145 Sheridan Rd, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
BAND ACHROMATIC METALENS; LASING ACTION; 2ND-HARMONIC GENERATION; OPTICS; LASERS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00345
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
CONSPECTUS: Rationally assembled nanostructures exhibit distinct physical and chemical properties beyond their individual units. Developments in nanofabrication techniques have enabled the patterning of a wide range of nanomaterial designs over macroscale (>in.(2)) areas. Periodic metal nanostructures show long-range diffractive interactions when the lattice spacing is close to the wavelength of the incident light. The collective coupling between metal nanoparticles in a lattice introduces sharp and intense plasmonic surface lattice resonances, in contrast to the broad localized resonances from single nanoparticles. Plasmonic nanoparticle lattices exhibit strongly enhanced optical fields within the subwavelength vicinity of the nanoparticle unit cells that are 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of individual units. These intense electromagnetic fields can manipulate nanoscale processes such as photocatalysis, optical spectroscopy, nonlinear optics, and light harvesting. This Account focuses on advances in exciton-plasmon coupling and light-matter interactions with plasmonic nanoparticle lattices. First, we introduce the fundamentals of ultrasharp surface lattice resonances; these resonances arise from the coupling of the localized surface plasmons of a nanoparticle to the diffraction mode from the lattice. Second, we discuss how integrating dye molecules with plasmonic nanoparticle lattices can result in an architecture for nanoscale lasing at room temperature. The lasing emission wavelength can be tuned in real time by adjusting the refractive index environment or varying the lattice spacing. Third, we describe how manipulating either the shape of the unit cell or the lattice geometry can control the lasing emission properties. Low-symmetry plasmonic nanoparticle lattices can show polarization-dependent lasing responses, and multiscale plasmonic superlattices-finite patches of nanoparticles grouped into microscale arrays-can support multiple plasmon resonances for controlled multimodal nanolasing. Fourth, we discuss how the assembly of photoactive emitters on the nanocavity arrays behaves as a hybrid materials system with enhanced exciton plasmon coupling. Positioning metal-organic framework materials around nanoparticles produces mixed photon modes with strongly enhanced photoluminescence at wavelengths determined by the lattice. Deterministic coupling of quantum emitters in two-dimensional materials to plasmonic lattices leads to preserved single-photon emission and reduced decay lifetimes. Finally, we highlight emerging applications of nanoparticle lattices from compact, fully reconfigurable imaging devices to solid-state emitter structures. Plasmonic nanoparticle lattices are a versatile, scalable platform for tunable flat optics, nontrivial topological photonics, and modified chemical reactivities.
引用
收藏
页码:2997 / 3007
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Modal representation of light-matter interactions in plasmonic nanoresonators
    Sauvan, C.
    Hugonin, J. -P.
    Lalanne, P.
    ACTIVE PHOTONIC MATERIALS VI, 2014, 9162
  • [12] Deep strong light-matter coupling in plasmonic nanoparticle crystals
    Mueller, Niclas S.
    Okamura, Yu
    Vieira, Bruno G. M.
    Juergensen, Sabrina
    Lange, Holger
    Barros, Eduardo B.
    Schulz, Florian
    Reich, Stephanie
    NATURE, 2020, 583 (7818) : 780 - +
  • [13] Exotic quantum light-matter interactions in bilayer square lattices
    Dong, Xing-Liang
    Li, Peng -Bo
    Chen, Jia-Qiang
    Li, Fu-Li
    Nori, Franco
    PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 2023, 108 (04)
  • [14] Bio-inspired plasmonic leaf for enhanced light-matter interactions
    Liu, Changxu
    Mao, Peng
    Guo, Qinghua
    Han, Min
    Zhang, Shuang
    NANOPHOTONICS, 2019, 8 (07) : 1291 - 1298
  • [15] Light-matter interactions at the nanoscale
    Lienau, Christoph
    Noginov, Mikhail A.
    Loncar, Marko
    JOURNAL OF OPTICS, 2014, 16 (11)
  • [16] Light-Matter interactions on the nanoscale
    Rahmani, Mohsen
    Jagadish, Chennupati
    BEILSTEIN JOURNAL OF NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2018, 9 : 2125 - 2127
  • [17] Light-Matter Interactions in Phosphorene
    Lu, Junpeng
    Yang, Jiong
    Carvalho, Alexandra
    Liu, Hongwei
    Lu, Yuerui
    Sow, Chorng Haur
    ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH, 2016, 49 (09) : 1806 - 1815
  • [18] Introduction: light-matter interactions
    Aghion, J.
    Bulletin de la Societe Royale des Sciences de Liege, 2000, 69 (02): : 63 - 81
  • [19] Graphene light-matter interactions
    Koppens, Frank
    2013 CONFERENCE ON LASERS AND ELECTRO-OPTICS (CLEO), 2013,
  • [20] 2D HYBRID PEROVSKITES Shaky lattices for light-matter interactions
    Schnedermann, Christoph
    Rao, Akshay
    Kukura, Philipp
    NATURE MATERIALS, 2019, 18 (04) : 307 - 308