Spin texture and chiral coupling of circularly polarized dipole field.

Journal: Nanophotonics (Berlin, Germany)
Published:
Abstract

We show that a circularly polarized electric dipole harbors a near-field concentrated wave which orbits around with an energy flux significantly larger (five orders of magnitudes at ∼1 nm radial distance) than far-field radiation. This near-field wave is found to carry transverse spins and reveal skyrmion spin texture (Néel-type). By performing electromagnetic analysis and numerical simulation, we demonstrate chiral extraction of a near-field rotational energy flux: the confined energy flow is out-coupled to surface plasmons on metal surface, whose curvature is designed to provide orbital angular momentum matched to spin angular momentum of dipole field, that is, to facilitate spin-orbit interaction. Strong coupling occurs with high chiral selectivity (∼113) and Purcell enhancement (∼17) when both linear and angular momenta are matched between dipole field and surface plasmons. Existence of a high-intensity energy flux in the deep-bottom near-field region (r ∼ 1 nm) opens up an interesting avenue in altering fundamental properties of dipole emission. For example, extracting ∼1% of this flux would result in enhancing spontaneous emission rate by ∼1000 times.

Authors
Yu Shi, Hong Kim