Focusing on nanoplasmonics
By imaging fluorescence from gold within
a bow tie-shaped plasmonic device, scientists can now study plasmonic fields in
nanostructures such as a strand of DNA or a quantum dot without altering the structures’
behavior.
Typical plasmonic devices crowd electromagnetic waves into tiny
metal structures that concentrate the energy into nanoscale dimensions. By coupling
electronics with photonics in these nanostructures, these devices could be harnessed
for high-speed data transmission or ultrafast detector arrays. However, studying
nanostructures is problematic because examining them means changing their behavior.
Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory explain that
wavelengths of light, whether the source is a laser or a lightbulb, are too large
for studying plasmonic fields in nanostructures. Another limitation is that when
examining a typical nanoscale object, distinguishing one closely spaced nanostructure
from another is difficult.
To make that distinction, the researchers are using a previously
developed bow tie-shaped plasmonic device to capture, filter and steer light on
the nanoscale. Serving as an antenna, the nanocolor sorter device can divert light
in tiny spaces to a desired set of colors, which is crucial for filters and other
detectors. It was engineered by staff scientist Jim Schuck in collaboration with
researchers at Molecular Foundry, a US Department of Energy Nanoscale Science Research
Center.
The team is using this device to visualize plasmonic fields. By
imaging fluorescence from gold within the bow-tie device and maximizing the number
of photons collected, they can determine the position of plasmonic modes as close
together as a few nanometers. They also found that by shifting the structure of
a double bow-tie antenna by only a few nanometers, they could focus light at different
positions inside the bow tie with accuracy and predictability.
Their findings appeared in
Physical Review Letters, Jan. 18, 2011
(doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.037402). Support for their work was provided by the
National Science Foundation through its Network for Computational Nanotechnology.
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