Artículos de revistas
Focusing surface plasmons on Er3+ ions through gold planar plasmonic lenses
Fecha
2012Registro en:
APPLIED PHYSICS A-MATERIALS SCIENCE & PROCESSING, NEW YORK, v. 109, n. 4, supl. 1, Part 1, pp. 1037-1041, DEC, 2012
0947-8396
10.1007/s00339-012-7374-8
Autor
Rivera, Victor Anthony Garcia
Ferri, F. A.
Nunes, Luiz Antonio de Oliveira
Zanatta, Antonio Ricardo
Marega Junior, Euclydes
Institución
Resumen
Gold plasmonic lenses consisting of a planar concentric rings-groove with different periods were milled with a focused gallium ion beam on a gold thin film deposited onto an Er3+-doped tellurite glass. The plasmonic lenses were vertically illuminated with an argon ion laser highly focused by means of a 50x objective lens. The focusing mechanism of the plasmonic lenses is explained using a coherent interference model of surface plasmon-polariton (SPP) generation on the circular grating due to the incident field. As a result, phase modulation can be accomplished by the groove gap, similar to a nanoslit array with different widths. This focusing allows a high confinement of SPPs that can excite the Er3+ ions of the glass. The Er3+ luminescence spectra were measured in the far-field (500-750 nm wavelength range), where we could verify the excitation yield via the plasmonic lens on the Er3+ ions. We analyze the influence of the geometrical parameters on the luminescence spectra. The variation of these parameters results in considerable changes of the luminescence spectra.