Photothermal nanoimaging of dissipative surface polaritons

ORAL

Abstract

Controlling the functionalities of 2D material structures via strong light-matter coupling requires understanding of the dissipation and thermalization dynamics of surface polaritons. However, the intricate details of polaritonic decay processes are rooted in a plethora of physical mechanism spanning widely separated length and time scales, even down to regimes where dissipation is no longer a readily measurable quantity.
Here, we introduce photothermal force microscopy as a nanoimaging modality to visualize energy dissipation via surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs). Studying graphene on silicon dioxide, we perform real-space imaging of SPPs via photothermal force detection (AFM-IR) with contrast interpreted due to thermal substrate expansion induced by the local SPP decay. Complementary to previous studies, reporting the optical characterization of SPPs via IR-sSNOM, we will show that photothermal expansion forces facilitate the direct mechanical detection of the non-radiative SPP decay process. Our observations reveal that dissipative surface polariton modes might enable to control the spatio-temporal dynamics of thermal nanosystems.

*F. Menges gratefully acknowledges funding support by The Branco Weiss Fellowship - Society in Science, administered by the ETH Zurich.

Presenters

  • Fabian Menges

    • University of Colorado, Boulder

Authors

  • Honghua U Yang

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Liang-Chun Lin

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • tao jiang

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
    • Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry, and JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Samuel Berweger

    • NIST Boulder
    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • Fabian Menges

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Markus B. Raschke

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
    • Physics and Chemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder
    • University of Colorado Boulder
    • Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry, and JILA, University of Colorado - Boulder
    • Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry and JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder
    • Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry, and JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder
    • Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder
    • Physics, Chemistry, and JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder