0000000000851332
AUTHOR
Marcus Schmelzeisen
Field Emission of Electrons Generated by the Near Field of Strongly Coupled Plasmons
Field emission of electrons is generated solely by the ultrastrong near-field of strongly coupled plasmons without the help of a noticeable dc field. Strongly coupled plasmons are excited at Au nanoparticles in subnanometer distance to a Au film by femtosecond laser pulses. Field-emitted electrons from individual nanoparticles are detected by means of photoelectron emission microscopy and spectroscopy. The dependence of total electron yield and kinetic energy on the laser power proves that field emission is the underlying emission process. We derive a dynamic version of the Fowler-Nordheim equation that yields perfect agreement with the experiment.
Near Field of Strongly Coupled Plasmons: Uncovering Dark Modes
Strongly coupled plasmons in a system of individual gold nanoparticles placed at subnanometer distance to a gold film (nanoparticle-on-plane, NPOP) are investigated using two complementary single particle spectroscopy techniques. Optical scattering spectroscopy exclusively detects plasmon modes that couple to the far field via their dipole moment (bright modes). By using photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM), we detect in the identical NPOPs near-field modes that do not couple to the scattered far field (dark modes) and are characterized by a strongly enhanced nonlinear electron emission process. To our knowledge, this is the first time that both far- and near-field spectroscopy are carr…