Cherqui Charles, Bourgeois Marc R, Wang Danqing, Schatz George C
Department of Chemistry , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
Applied Physics Program , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
Acc Chem Res. 2019 Sep 17;52(9):2548-2558. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00312. Epub 2019 Aug 29.
Plasmonic surface lattice resonances (SLRs) are mixed light-matter states emergent in a system of periodically arranged metallic nanoparticles (NPs) under the constraint that the array spacing is able to support a standing wave of optical-frequency light. The properties of SLRs derive from two separate physical effects; the electromagnetic (plasmonic) response of metal NPs and the electromagnetic states (photonic cavity modes) associated with the array of NPs. Metal NPs, especially free-electron metals such as silver, gold, aluminum, and alkali metals, support optical-frequency electron density oscillations known as localized surface plasmons (LSPs). The high density of conduction-band electrons in these metals gives rise to plasmon excitations that strongly couple to light even for particles that are several orders of magnitude smaller than the wavelength of the excitation source. In this sense, LSPs have the remarkable ability to squeeze far-field light into intensely localized electric near-fields that can enhance the intensity of light by factors of ∼10 or more. Moreover, as a result of advances in the synthesis and fabrication of NPs, the intrinsic dependence of LSPs on the NP geometry, composition, and size can readily be exploited to design NPs with a wide range of optical properties. One drawback in using LSPs to enhance optical, electronic, or chemical processes is the losses introduced into the system by dephasing and Ohmic damping-an effect that must either be tolerated or mitigated. Plasmonic SLRs enable the mitigation of loss effects through the coupling of LSPs to diffractive states that arise from arrays satisfying Bragg scattering conditions, also known as Rayleigh anomalies. Bragg modes are well-known for arrays of dielectric NPs, where they funnel and trap incoming light into the plane of the lattice, defining a photonic cavity. The low losses and narrow linewidths associated with dielectric NPs produce Bragg modes that oscillate for ∼10-10 cycles before decaying. These modes are of great interest to the metamaterials community but have relatively weak electric fields associated with dielectric NPs and therefore are not used for applications where local field enhancements are needed. Plasmonic lattices, i.e., photonic crystals composed of metallic NPs, combine the characteristics of both LSPs and diffractive states, enabling both enhanced local fields and narrow-linewidth excitations, in many respects providing the best advantages of both materials. Thus, by control of the periodicity and global symmetry of the lattice in addition to the material composition and shape of the constituent NPs, SLRs can be designed to simultaneously survive for up to 10 cycles while maintaining the electric field enhancements near the NP surface that have made the use of LSPs ubiquitous in nanoscience. Modern fabrication methods allow for square-centimeter-scale patches of two-dimensional arrays that are composed of approximately one trillion NPs, making them effectively infinite at the nanoscale. Because of these advances, it is now possible to experimentally realize SLRs with properties that approach those predicted by idealized theoretical models. In this Account, we introduce the fundamental theory of both SLRs and SLR-mediated lasing, where the latter is one of the most important applications of plasmonic SLRs that has emerged to date. The focus of this Account is on theoretical concepts for describing plasmonic SLRs and computational methods used for their study, but throughout we emphasize physical insights provided by the theory that aid in making applications.
表面等离激元晶格共振(SLR)是一种混合的光与物质状态,出现在周期性排列的金属纳米颗粒(NP)系统中,条件是阵列间距能够支持光频光的驻波。SLR的特性源于两种不同的物理效应:金属NP的电磁(等离激元)响应以及与NP阵列相关的电磁状态(光子腔模)。金属NP,特别是诸如银、金、铝和碱金属等自由电子金属,支持被称为局域表面等离激元(LSP)的光频电子密度振荡。这些金属中导带电子的高密度会引发等离激元激发,即使对于比激发源波长小几个数量级的颗粒,这种激发也能与光强烈耦合。从这个意义上说,LSP具有将远场光压缩成强烈局域化的电近场的显著能力,这种近场能将光强度增强约10倍或更多。此外,由于NP合成与制造技术的进步,LSP对NP几何形状、组成和尺寸的内在依赖性能够很容易地被利用来设计具有广泛光学特性的NP。使用LSP来增强光学、电子或化学过程的一个缺点是由退相和欧姆阻尼引入系统的损耗——这种效应要么必须被容忍,要么必须减轻。等离激元SLR能够通过将LSP与满足布拉格散射条件(也称为瑞利异常)的阵列产生的衍射态耦合来减轻损耗效应。布拉格模在介电NP阵列中是众所周知的,在那里它们将入射光引导并捕获到晶格平面内,从而定义了一个光子腔。与介电NP相关的低损耗和窄线宽产生的布拉格模在衰减前会振荡约10 - 10个周期。这些模式对超材料领域非常有吸引力,但与介电NP相关的电场相对较弱,因此不适用于需要局部场增强的应用。等离激元晶格,即由金属NP组成的光子晶体,结合了LSP和衍射态的特性,在许多方面实现了增强的局部场和窄线宽激发,兼具了两种材料的最佳优势。因此,通过控制晶格的周期性和全局对称性以及组成NP的材料成分和形状,可以设计SLR,使其同时能持续振荡多达10个周期,同时保持NP表面附近的电场增强,这使得LSP在纳米科学中得到了广泛应用。现代制造方法能够制备出面积达平方厘米级的二维阵列贴片,其中包含约一万亿个NP,使其在纳米尺度上有效地趋近于无限大。由于这些进展,现在已经能够通过实验实现具有接近理想化理论模型所预测特性的SLR。在本综述中,我们介绍了SLR以及SLR介导的激光发射的基本理论,其中后者是迄今为止出现的等离激元SLR最重要的应用之一。本综述的重点是描述等离激元SLR的理论概念及其研究中使用的计算方法,但我们始终强调该理论提供的有助于实际应用的物理见解。