TY - RPRT
T1 - Electromagnetic Scattering in
Micro- and Nanostructured
Materials.
AU - de Lasson, Jakob Rosenkrantz
A2 - Mørk, Jesper
A2 - Kristensen, Philip Trøst
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - The research fields of optical microstructures and plasmonic nanostructures are particularly
active these years, and interesting applications in, e.g., quantum information technology
in the former and novel types of solar cells in the latter, drive the investigations. Central
in both fields is the interaction of light with matter, in the forms of semiconductors and
metals in the two cases, and fundamental understanding of the interactions is important
to optimize technological designs.
To address this, we in the present thesis develop a formalism for determining the
electric field in a homogeneous three dimensional space with spherical inhomogeneities
embedded. The formalism accounts fully for the multiple reflections the field undergoes
in such structures, and likewise the vectorial nature of the field is treated rigorously. The
formalism is based on the Lippmann-Schwinger equation and the electromagnetic Green’s
tensor and uses an expansion of the field on spherical wavefunctions. Addition theorems
for these are extensively used, and all parts of the formalism are expressed analytically.
With the formalism, we show that the simpler approach of modeling the spherical
scatterers as polarizable dipoles, which is often alluded to in the literature, breaks down
in the limit of closely spaced scattering objects. The study of metallic nanoparticles is
particularly intriguing when these are in close proximity, due to the coupling of their
near-fields, and the breakdown of the simpler approach reveals a need for the present
formalism.
Additionally, we study dimers and chains of metallic nanoparticles and analyze their
spectra, when exposed to fields of different polarizations. The spectral response is highly
dependent on the polarization, and we demonstrate for the dimer, under polarization
along the dimer axis, a d−1/2-dependence of the relative shift of the resonance wavelength,
d being the distance between the particles. This dependence on d is softer than reported
earlier, and thus constitutes the foundation for a more systematic study. The correlation
of distance and spectral properties may have applications within biosensing and -imaging
on the nanoscale. For the chain, we demonstrate a next-nearest neighbor interaction
between the nanoparticles through the study of its spectral properties. Finally, we present
a calculation of the Green’s tensor for the dimer, illustrating that the formalism may
likewise be used for modeling optical microstructures, e.g. three dimensional photonic
crystals.
AB - The research fields of optical microstructures and plasmonic nanostructures are particularly
active these years, and interesting applications in, e.g., quantum information technology
in the former and novel types of solar cells in the latter, drive the investigations. Central
in both fields is the interaction of light with matter, in the forms of semiconductors and
metals in the two cases, and fundamental understanding of the interactions is important
to optimize technological designs.
To address this, we in the present thesis develop a formalism for determining the
electric field in a homogeneous three dimensional space with spherical inhomogeneities
embedded. The formalism accounts fully for the multiple reflections the field undergoes
in such structures, and likewise the vectorial nature of the field is treated rigorously. The
formalism is based on the Lippmann-Schwinger equation and the electromagnetic Green’s
tensor and uses an expansion of the field on spherical wavefunctions. Addition theorems
for these are extensively used, and all parts of the formalism are expressed analytically.
With the formalism, we show that the simpler approach of modeling the spherical
scatterers as polarizable dipoles, which is often alluded to in the literature, breaks down
in the limit of closely spaced scattering objects. The study of metallic nanoparticles is
particularly intriguing when these are in close proximity, due to the coupling of their
near-fields, and the breakdown of the simpler approach reveals a need for the present
formalism.
Additionally, we study dimers and chains of metallic nanoparticles and analyze their
spectra, when exposed to fields of different polarizations. The spectral response is highly
dependent on the polarization, and we demonstrate for the dimer, under polarization
along the dimer axis, a d−1/2-dependence of the relative shift of the resonance wavelength,
d being the distance between the particles. This dependence on d is softer than reported
earlier, and thus constitutes the foundation for a more systematic study. The correlation
of distance and spectral properties may have applications within biosensing and -imaging
on the nanoscale. For the chain, we demonstrate a next-nearest neighbor interaction
between the nanoparticles through the study of its spectral properties. Finally, we present
a calculation of the Green’s tensor for the dimer, illustrating that the formalism may
likewise be used for modeling optical microstructures, e.g. three dimensional photonic
crystals.
M3 - Report
BT - Electromagnetic Scattering in
Micro- and Nanostructured
Materials.
PB - DTU Fotonik
ER -