Researchers can now accurately measure the emergence and damping of a plasmonic field
This is crucial for renewable energy and other technologies
RMT.Bergues
Localized surface plasmons are a unique excitation of electrons in nanoscale metals like gold or silver, where the mobile electrons within the metal oscillate collectively with the light-electric field. This condenses optical energy, which in turn enables applications in photonics and energy conversion, for example in photocatalysis. To advance such applications, it is important to understand the details of the plasmon drive and damping. However, one problem for the development of related experiments is that the processes take place on extremely short time scales (within few femtoseconds).
The attosecond community, including lead authors Matthias Kling and Francesca Calegari, have developed tools to measure the oscillating electric field of ultrashort laser pulses. In one of these field sampling methods, an intense laser pulse is focused in air between two electrodes, generating a measurable current. The intense pulse is then overlayed with a weak signal pulse to be characterized. The signal pulse modulates the ionization rate and consequently the generated current. Screening the delay between the two pulses provides a time-dependent signal proportional to the electric field of the signal pulse.
“We employed this configuration for the first time to characterize the signal field emerging from a resonantly excited plasmonic sample”, says Francesca Calegari, lead scientist at DESY, physics Professor at Universität Hamburg and a spokesperson of the Cluster of Excellence “CUI: Advanced Imaging of Matter”. The difference of the reconstructed pulse with plasmon interaction to the reference pulse allowed the scientists to trace the emergence of the plasmon and its fast decay, which they confirmed by electrodynamic model calculations.
“Our approach can be used to characterize arbitrary plasmonic samples in ambient conditions and in the far-field”, adds CUI scientist Prof. Holger Lange. Additionally, the precise characterization of the laser field emerging from nanoplasmonic materials could constitute a new tool to optimize the design of phase-shaping devices for ultrashort laser pulses.
Original publication
Original publication
Kai-Fu Wong, Weiwei Li, Zilong Wang, Vincent Wanie, Erik Månsson, Dominik Hoeing, Johannes Blöchl, Thomas Nubbemeyer, Abdallah Azzeer, Andrea Trabattoni, Holger Lange, Francesca Calegari, Matthias F. Kling; "Far-Field Petahertz Sampling of Plasmonic Fields"; Nano Letters, 2024-3-26
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