Static magnetic control of light emission in plasmonic nanojunctions

ORAL

Abstract

Localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) in metal nanoparticles have been studied extensively through scattering and absorption. Static magnetic field-induced changes in plasmonic far-field response stem from the classical Hall effect and are generally very small in noble metals within the visible frequency range at readily accessible magnetic fields. Planar plasmonic tunnel junctions allow the study of nanogap LSPRs through current-driven light emission. We find that the electroluminescence of such junctions is modulated by tens of percent with a magnetic field of a few Teslas, exceeding Hall-based expectations by orders of magnitude. Complementary quantum mechanical and electromagnetic modeling reveals that a modest static magnetic field can introduce significant chirality in the transition dipoles generated during the electron tunneling process. This strongly affects the excitation of LSPRs and leads to magnetic-field sensitive far-field electroluminescent emission. This is a new paradigm for tunable nanoscale light sources.

*D. N., S. L., and K. W. S. acknowledge support from Robert A. Welch Foundation awards C-1636 and C-2252, and NSF award ECCS 2309941.  D. N. also acknowledges the DURIP award ONR N0001-23-1-2101 for the acquisition of the OptiCool and associated spectrometer hardware used in the experiment. JAA, AIFD and FJGV acknowledge support from the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades under grant agreements CEX2023-001316-M, PID2021-126964OB-I00 and PID2021-127968NB-I00. JAA and FJGV also thank the project "Disruptive 2D materials (MAD2D-CM)-UAM7", funded by Comunidad de Madrid, by the Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan, and by NextGenerationEU from the European Union. A. A. and Q. Y. acknowledge support from Robert A. Welch Foundation award C-2224.

Publication: arXiv:2509.25333

Presenters

  • Douglas Natelson

    • Rice University

Authors

  • Douglas Natelson

    • Rice University
  • Shusen Liao

    • Rice University
  • Jaime Abad-Arredondo

    • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
  • Ken William Ssennyimba

    • Rice University
  • Qian Ye

    • Rice University
  • Alessandro Alabastri

    • Rice University
  • Antonio I Fernández-Dominguez

    • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
  • Francisco José García-Vidal

    • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid