4.6 Article

Inhomogeneous Surface Plasmon Polaritons

Journal

ACS PHOTONICS
Volume 1, Issue 8, Pages 739-745

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ph500172f

Keywords

plasmonics; surface waves; inhomogeneous waves; refraction; near-field optics; dispersion engineering

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences User Facility [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  2. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-FG02-10ER16153]
  3. Department of Energy [DE-NA0001789]

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We show analytically and with rigorous computational electrodynamics how inhomogeneous surface plasmon polaritons (ISPPs) can be generated by refraction of ordinary SPPs at metal-metal interfaces. ISPPs, in contrast with SPPs, propagate and decay in different directions and can therefore exhibit significantly different intensity patterns. Our analytical arguments are based on a complex generalization of Snells law to describe how SPPs moving on one metal surface are refracted at an interface with a second, different metal surface. The refracted waveform on the second metal is an ISPP. Under suitable circumstances the decay of an ISPP can be almost perpendicular to the propagation direction, leading to significant confinement. It is also found that ISPPs on the second metal can retain information about the SPPs on the first metal, a phenomenon that we term dispersion imprinting. The complex Snells law predictions are validated with 3-D finite-difference time-domain simulations, and possible means of experimentally observing ISPPs are suggested. The idea of ISPPs and how they result from refraction may expand the potential for designing the propagation and dispersion features of surface waves in general, including surface phonon polaritons, surface magnons, and guided waves in metamaterials.

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