In quantum optical Enhancement of Index of Refraction (EIR), coherence and quantum interference render the atomic systems to exhibit orders of magnitude higher susceptibilities with vanishing or even negative absorption at their resonances. Here we show the plasmonic analogue of the quantum optical EIR effect in an optical system and further implement this in a linear all-optical switching mechanism. We realize plasmon-induced EIR using a particular plasmonic metasurface consisting of a square array of L-shaped meta-molecules. In contrast to the conventional methods, this approach provides a scheme to modulate the amplitude of incident signals by coherent control of absorption without implementing gain materials or nonlinear processes. Therefore, light is controlled by applying ultra-low intensity at the extreme levels of spatiotemporal localization. In the pursuit of potential applications of linear all-optical switching devices, this scheme may introduce an effective tool for improving the modulation strength of optical modulators and switches through the amplification of input signals at ultra-low power.
We study a polymer-based hyperbolic metamaterial (HMM) structure composed of three Au-polymer bilayers with a hyperbolic dispersion relation. Using an effective refractive index retrieval algorithm, we obtain the effective permittivity of the experimentally fabricated polymer-based structure. In particular, the unique polymer-based HMM shows the existence of high-k modes that propagate in the metal-dielectric multilayered structure due to the excitation of bulk plasmon-polaritonic modes. Moreover, we compare the experimental luminescence and fluorescence lifetime results of the multilayered Au and a dye-doped polymer (PMMA) to investigate the dynamics of three different emitters, each incorporated within the unique polymer-based HMM structure. With emitters closer to the epsilon-near-zero region of the HMM, we observed a relatively high shortening of the average lifetime as compared to other emitters either close or far from the epsilon-near-zero region. This served as evidence of coupling between the emitters and the HMM as well as confirmed the increase in the non-radiative recombination rate of the different emitters. We also show that the metallic losses of a passive polymer-based HMM can be greatly compensated by a gain material with an emission wavelength close to the epsilon-near-zero region of the HMM. These results demonstrate the unique potential of an active polymer-based hyperbolic metamaterial in loss compensation, quantum applications, and sub-wavelength imaging techniques.
A novel ultrafast all-optical switching mechanism is demonstrated theoretically and experimentally based on a plasmonic analogue of the effect of Enhancement of Index of Refraction(EIR) in quantum optics. In the quantum optical EIR the atomic systems are rendered by coherence and quantum interference to exhibit orders of magnitude higher index of refraction with vanishing or even negative absorption near their resonances. Similarly, in the plasmon induced EIR a probe signal can experience positive, zero or negative extinction while strongly interacting with a metallic nanorod in a metamolecule which is coherently excited by a control beam. The same mechanism is observed in the collective response of a square array of such metamolecules in the form of a metasurface to modulate the amplitude of a signal by coherent control of absorption from positive to negative values without implementing gain materials or nonlinear processes. This novel approach can be used for challenging the control of light by light at the extreme levels of space, time and intensity by applying ultra-short pulses interacting with ultrafast surface plasmons or extremely low intensity pulses at the level of single photon to a nanoscale single plasmonic metamolecule. The scheme also introduces an effective tool for improving the modulation strength of optical modulators and switches through amplification of the input signal.
Resonances are the cornerstone of photonic applications in many areas of physics and engineering. The spectral position of a photonic resonance is dominated by the structure design. Here, we devise a polarization-independent plasmonic structure comprising nanoantennas with two resonances on an epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) substrate in order to loosen this correlation to obtain less sensitivity to geometrical perturbations of the structure. Compared with the bare glass substrate, the designed plasmonic nanoantennas on an ENZ substrate exhibit a nearly three-fold reduction only in the resonance wavelength shift near the ENZ wavelength as a function of antenna length.
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