Surface Plasmon Propagation in Nanostructured Metallic Waveguides

ORAL

Abstract

Visible frequencies of light can be routed on subwavelength scales with nanostructured, metallic waveguides by coupling optical energy to surface plasmon (SP) modes at a metal-insulator interface. Epitaxially-grown Ag nanowires and nanocoaxes provide a low-loss, ``model'' system to characterize the propagation of SP waves. We have studied these structures by electron, focused ion, scanning probe, and optical microscopies, and have observed propagation lengths exceeding 15$\lambda_{vac}$ with confinement on the order of $0.07(\lambda_{vac})^{2}$. Experimental efforts towards lithographically-fabricated metal-insulator-metal waveguides are discussed. Finally, an architecture for a nanocoax-based optical microscope,\footnote{K. Kempa, X. Wang, Z. F. Ren, and M. J. Naughton, \textit{Appl}. \textit{Phys}. \textit{Lett}. \textbf{92}, 043114 (2008)} which extracts near-field (evanescent) information and propagates it into the far-field, is presented.

Authors

  • Y.M. Calm

    Boston College

  • J.M. Merlo

    Boston College

  • A.H. Rose

    Boston College

  • N.T. Nesbitt

    Boston College

  • A.M. Boyce

    Boston College

  • G. McMahon

    Boston College

  • M.J. Burns

    Boston College

  • K. Kempa

    Boston College

  • M.J. Naughton

    Boston College