Long-range dipole-dipole interactions in a plasmonic lattice.
ORAL
Abstract
Spontaneous emission of quantum emitters can be enhanced by increasing the local density of optical states whereas engineering dipole-dipole interactions require modifying the two-point spectral density function. Here, we experimentally demonstrate long-range dipole-dipole interactions (DDIs) mediated by surface lattice resonances in a plasmonic nanoparticle lattice. Using angle-resolved spectral measurements and fluorescence lifetime studies, we show that unique hybrid plasmonic modes mediate long-range DDI between donor and acceptor molecules. The fluorescence lifetime measurements show density-dependent non-exponential decay dynamics. We observe significant and persistent long-range dipole-dipole
interaction strengths at room temperatures for a range of densities that map to 800 nm mean nearest-neighbor separation distance between donor and acceptor dipoles, a factor of 100 larger than free space. Our results pave the way to engineer and control long-range DDIs between ensembles of emitters at room temperature.
interaction strengths at room temperatures for a range of densities that map to 800 nm mean nearest-neighbor separation distance between donor and acceptor dipoles, a factor of 100 larger than free space. Our results pave the way to engineer and control long-range DDIs between ensembles of emitters at room temperature.
*US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Sciences under DE-SC0017717, National Science Foundation under DMR-1654676, DMR-1904385 and US Department of Defense Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship under N00014-17-1-3023.
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Publication: ACS Nano Letters, 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02835
Presenters
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Ashwin K Boddeti
- Purdue University