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Plasmonics and Metamaterials Nick Fang ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 1 Nick Fang University of Illinois [email protected]

Plasmonics-Metamaterials

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Page 1: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Plasmonics and Metamaterials

Nick Fang

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 1

Nick FangUniversity of [email protected]

Page 2: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Outline• Introduction to Metamaterials

• New Physics of Metmaterials– Artificial PlasmaArtificial Plasma– High Frequency Magnetism– Negative Refraction– Negative Refraction– Cloaking

• Outlook

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 2

Page 3: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

New Frontiers of PhotonicsSubdiffraction imaging Sensing

Fang et al., Science, 2005

Telecom applications

Fang et al., Science, 2005

Invisibility cloaks

Van Duyne et al., MRS bulletin, 2005

MetamaterialsLogeeswaran et al., Appl. Phys. A, 2007

Chen et al., PRL, 2007

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 3

• Materials Today’s top 10 advances in material science over the past 50 years • Discover top 100 science stories of the year 2006

Page 4: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

What are Meta-Materials ?Atomic Crystal Lattice Sub- Meta “Atoms”

1nm 10 nm -100 m

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 4

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Metamaterials

• Definition by a think-tank futurist: “Metamaterials are new materials designated by manipulatingMetamaterials are new materials designated by manipulating extreme magnitudes of physical conditions during synthesis and manufacture.”

• Our Definition:A new class of ordered composites from the inclusion of artificially fabricated, extrinsic, low dimensional inhomogeneities.

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 5

Page 6: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Metamaterial vs Natural Medium

Common Natural medium Metamat’l

Wave Propagation Quantum Waves Classical Waves

ThermalThermal excitation Significant Low?

Symmetry 230 crystal lattices Rotation, TranslationTopologyTopology …

Atomic Interaction

Hard or Soft sphere; nearest neighbor dominant

“Atoms” can be larger than lattice

Dopant and Defects Random Controllable

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 6

And More

Page 7: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Electromagnetic Metamaterials

• When and <0

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 7

(from Valerie Browning, DARPA)

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Effective Medium Properties<B> In long wavelength limit(a<<), we take the

cell as an macroscopic point: all physical properties are smoothed in the cell volume

1 1( )exp( ) ( )exp( )

1 1

i iC C

E r iG r dV H r iG r dVV V

E H

1 1( )exp( ) ( )exp( )i iC C

D r iG r dV B r iG r dVV V

D B

D B

<H> <E>

D BE H

The effective and can be defined as ratios of the macroscopic fields:

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 8

Page 9: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Plasmonic “Atoms” and “Crystals”

Consider a sparse wire matrix:• “Diluted” electron density:

Natural metal exhibit negative at Optical Frequency:

2

How to lower the plasma frequency?

effn

• Diluted electron density:

21 ,p

i

0

22 eff

peff

n e

m

3 4

• Heavy Mass of Electrons (due to magnetic induction):

Natural bulk metal3 410 10 !eff em m

aApplications: Tunable optical high

Pendry, PRL,1996

2r pass filter (visible to THz)

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 9

Page 10: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

How to Lower the Frequency?

• “Diluted” electron density– Lowered filling ratiog

• Heavy Mass of ElectronsM ti ff t– Magnetic effect

P mv eA

2 22

)/ln(2

2

20

0

22

raac

men

eff

effp

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 10

)(0 eff

Page 11: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Plasmonic Response

3

E 1

2

2

-1

0

erm

ittiv

ity (

)

2

21 p

-3

-2Pe

-5

-4

0 0.5 1 1.5 2

The wire medium exhibits <0 below the plasma frequency.

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 11

Frequency (/p)

frequency.

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At <0

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- Pendry, 1998

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Physics of Surface Plasmon

dielectricE kzdielectricE kzdielectricE kz

(H. Raether, Surface Plasmons, Springer-

Verlag, 1988)

kx + + + + + +

z

+ + + + + +

z

z

kxxmetalHy metalHy metal

Hy

x

=ckx

• EM waves propagating along the interface between two media with their of opposite sign.

p

pp g

• Intensity maximum at interface; exponentially decays away from

1/ 21 2k

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exponentially decays away from the interface. kx1 2

xkc

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Propagation length of SPs

If consider the absorption in metal:''

1'11 i

Then, kx become a complex kx=kx’+ikx’’

21

'1'

k '1 1

c

kx

2'

''1

23

'

'1''

1

kx 2'

11 21

cx

The propagation length L

For silver: L=22 m at 514.5nmL=500 m at 1060 nmThe propagation length L

1''2 xkL

Potential for Chip Scale optical interconnects!

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 14

p

Page 15: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Field enhancement due to SPs

)2exp(1)exp(

)1/0(

)1/2(

110201

11120120122

0

2

dikrrdikttt

H

H

z

zy

2

yH

The ratio of the electromagnetic energy at two sides of the metal film:

)1/0( 1102010H zy

0 12

kziz kk 1

where2

k

kz

i

iz

kiik kk

r

ikik rt 1

z

20

2

21

3

21

212201

22

012)(

114radxxx

i

kkket

ctT

00'1 )1(

''

2'1

'max21

TThe maximum enhancement:

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 15

''1

'10

max 1 The maximum enhancement:For silver, at =350 nm, T~3X102

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High f Magnetism?

e-B a

2r

Magnetism in natural materials f d b 100 GH !

Atome-

fades away above 100 GHz !

(Pendry et al, IEEE MTT, 1999)j Array of Split Ring Resonators

---

+

++

H0C

Bg

The strong capacitive coupling bet een ind cti e c rrent loops

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 16

between inductive current loops leads the magnetic resonance

Page 17: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Artificial Magnetism

H0H inside the cylinder:

k

eff =

0

eff

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 17

0 0<<1, No Resonance

Page 18: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Artificial Magnetism (2)

1' ( )i L i

Resonance by Impedance Coupling

' ( )i L izC

1 1F F

0 0 0

1 12 ( ( )) 2 2(1 ) 1

F Fi iz z ir r r

Resonance, Re()<0 when 21 zF Resonance, Re() 0 when0

1Fr

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 18

Page 19: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Split-Ring Resonators

2 20

32

dzr

0=0

0

1MP F 1 F

R=11, a=25, d=2

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 19

Page 20: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

The Swiss Roll Structure

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 20

Enhanced Coupling by adding more turns, Lower resonant Freq

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Application Example: Open MRI

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 21

M. C. K. Wiltshire et al., Science 291, 849 (2001).

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Dispersion with Magnetic Resonance

0: resonant frequency(->inf)

MP: “Magnetic Plasma” Frequency( 0)

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 22

(=0)

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To Higher Frequency: Resistance Issue

Hampered Performance at Hi h F (S l

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 23

Higher Frequency (Scale Effect)

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Metamaterial for telecomChallenges: Fiber-optic communication systems require devices operating in

near-IR [λ = 1312nm/229THz (min. dispersion), 1550nm/193THz (min. attenuation)][λ 1312nm/229THz (min. dispersion), 1550nm/193THz (min. attenuation)]

50nm!!!

Breakdown of linear scaling and saturation of resonant response of SRRs at optical freqZhou et al PRL 2005

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 24

of resonant response of SRRs at optical freqZhou et al., PRL, 2005

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Combining the building blocks

20

1

2

3

ty (

)

2

21 p

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

Per

mitt

ivit

5

10

()

50 0.5 1 1.5 2

Frequency (/p)

2

2 20

1 F

-5

0

Per

mea

bilit

y

-100 0.5 1 1.5 2

Frequency (/p)

F th b ildi bl k i h i t f t t i l

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 25

From these building blocks, a rich variety of metamaterial structures can be developed.

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LHM with both – and -

Merger of SRR and Plasmon Wires: -> LHM

Smith et al PRL 2000;Science 2001

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 26

Smith et al, PRL, 2000;Science, 2001

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Implications of <0, <0

Direction of Energy Flow: S E H

Di ti f Ph k E BDirection of Phase Velocity:

Phase and Energy propagation directions are thus antiparallel:

|| k E B E H S

“L f h d d i l ”

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 27

“Left-handed materials”

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Negative Refractionr

i

For TE WavesH

E

,

• Boundary Conditions:

tt

y

1tE 1tH 1nE 1nH 1tk 1nkn̂1:RH

2tE 2tH 2nE 2nH 2tk 2nk2:LH

E E ( )

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 28

1 1 2 2 n nE E

1 1 2 2 n nH H2

1

sgn( )sgn( )

nn

Page 29: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Frequency Dispersion

The permittivity and permeability must be causal analytic functions; Kramers-Kronig applies:

"1' 1x

PV dx

' 11"x

PV dx

functions; Kramers Kronig applies:

1 PV dxx

x

1

1

2 21 1 04 4mediumU E H

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 29

Page 30: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Measurement of Refractive Index

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 30

Page 31: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Measurement of Refractive Index

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 31

Shelby, Smith et al, Science, 2001

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Rerouting EM Waves

Controlling Electromagnetic Fields , J. B.Pendry et al,Science 321,2006

Distorted fieldFree space field

tHE

0

EH

tHEq 0

E

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 32

tH

0

tEHq

0

Page 33: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Metamaterial Cloak

RrR

212 )(

rRRrr

12

21 RrR 21

2R

12 RR

12

2

RRR

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 33

12

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Invisibility cloak

• “The cloak would act like you've opened up a hole inspace," "All light or other electromagnetic waves areswept around the area, guided by the metamaterialto emerge on the other side as if they had passedthrough an empty volume of space.“through an empty volume of space.

-David Smith ,Duke University

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 34

Smith et al, Science 2006

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Towards optical metamaterialsNanoimprintIon/E-beam lithography Microfabrication Bulk machining

1000Nanoimprint Microfabrication

AnisotropicMetallic rods(2005)

MDM (2006-07)

Hyperlens (2007)

Superlens(2005-07)

Plasmonic

Bulk machining

uenc

ies

10

100Plasmonic+NIMNIMMagnetic

p

SiC superlens (2006)

(2005)

LSR (2007)

Semiconductormetamaterial

Fishnet(2005-07)

Hz)

ptic

al fr

eq

1

10 p ( )metamaterial (2007) Terahertz

resonators (2004)

Terahertz confinedncy

(THO

0.1Terahertz confined surface plasmon(2008)

requ

en

• SRR: Split-ring resonator• LSR: L-shaped resonator

1E-3

0.01 SRR(2000-03)

Fr • MDM: Metal-dielectric-metal• NIM: Negative index materials

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0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 100001E 3

Feature size (m)

Page 36: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

Other interesting Topics

• The Maxwell Stress Tensor: how the artificial atoms interactatoms interact

• Moving media: Negative Doppler effectMoving media: Negative Doppler effect

• High f magnetism: how to demonstrate magnetic• High f magnetism: how to demonstrate magnetic effect?– The Meissner effect and phase transitionp– Magnonic lattice?

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 36

Page 37: Plasmonics-Metamaterials

References• Extremely-Low-Frequency Plasmons in Metallic Mesostructures,J.B. Pendry,

A.T. Holden, W.J. Stewart and I. Youngs, Phys. Rev. Lett., 25, 4773 (1996).

• Low Frequency Plasmons in Thin Wire Structures, J.B. Pendry, AJ Holden, DJ Robbins, and WJ Stewart, J. Phys. Cond. Matt., 10, 4785 (1998).

• Magnetism from Conductors, and Enhanced Non-Linear Phenomena, JB Pendry, AJ Holden, DJ Robbins, and WJ Stewart, IEEE transactions on microwave theory and techniques 47,2075 (1999).

• Metamaterials and Negative Refractive Index, DR Smith, JB Pendry, MCK Wiltshire, Science 305 788-92 (2004)

• Metamaterials and the Control of Electromagnetic Fields, JB Pendry, Proceedings of the Ninth Rochester Conference on Coherence and Quantum Optics (2007)

ME 598 © 2006-2009 Nick Fang, University of Illinois. All rights reserved. 37

Optics (2007)