0000000000383188

AUTHOR

Regis Mejard

Single-Crystal vs Polycrystalline Gold: A Non-linear-Optics Analysis

Standard gold in the field of plasmonics is obtained by evaporation or sputtering and therefore is polycrystalline. Yet, this gold presents numbers of drawbacks such as roughness, grains and ill-defined electronic band diagrams in addition to the lack of reproducibility from one instrument to another. It is, thus, beneficial to turn to a metal production that can enable well-defined and controlled gold parameters. To that end, we have explored the wet synthesis of gold nanoplates which represents a simple and robust means of obtaining single-crystal gold (Guo Z, Zhang Y, DuanMu Y, Xu L, Xie S, Gu N, Colloids Surf A 278:33–38, 2006). The synthesized nanoplates are from 50 to less than 100 nm…

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Hot electrons and nonlinear optical nanoantennas

The large field enhancement generated at the surface of a resonant plasmonic nanoparticle, or optical antennas, is the key mechanism that eventually led to the development of nonlinear plasmonics [1-2]. While the resonance may boost the nonlinear yield of an adjacent structure or surrounding medium, it was soon realized that optical antennas possess nonlinear coefficients comparable or exceeding those of standard nonlinear optical materials [3]. We discuss here two nonlinear optical processes — incoherent multi-photon luminescence (MPL) and coherent second-harmonic generation (SHG) — emitted from gold rod optical antennas upon local illumination with a tightly focused femtosecond near-infra…

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