Resonant Optical Antennas with Atomic-Sized Tips and Tunable Gaps Achieved by Mechanical Actuation and Electrical Control.

Journal: Nano Letters
Published:
Abstract

Enhanced electromagnetic fields in nanometer gaps of plasmonic structures increase the optical interaction with matter, including Raman scattering and optical absorption. Quantum electron tunneling across sub-1 nm gaps, however, lowers these effects again. Understanding these phenomena requires controlled variation of gap sizes. Mechanically actuated plasmonic antennas enable repeatable tuning of gap sizes from the weak-coupling over the quantum-electron-tunneling to the direct-electrical-contact regime. Gap sizes are controlled electrically via leads that only weakly disturb plasmonic modes. Conductance signals show a near-continuous transition from electron tunneling to metallic contact. As the antenna's absorption cross-section is reduced, thermal expansion effects are negligible, in contrast to conventional break-junctions. Optical scattering spectra reveal first continuous red shifts for decreasing gap sizes and then blue shifts below gaps of 0.3 nm. The approach provides pathways to study opto- and electromolecular processes at the limit of plasmonic sensing.

Authors
Cynthia Gruber, Lars Herrmann, Edson Bellido, Janine Dössegger, Antonis Olziersky, Ute Drechsler, Gabriel Puebla Hellmann, Gianluigi Botton, Lukas Novotny, Emanuel Lörtscher