• Photonics Research
  • Vol. 5, Issue 5, 527 (2017)
Hailong Wang, Yuyang Wang, Yi Wang, Weiqing Xu, and Shuping Xu*
Author Affiliations
  • State Key Laboratory of Supramolecular Structure and Materials, Institute of Theoretical Chemistry, Jilin University, Changchun 130012, China
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    DOI: 10.1364/PRJ.5.000527 Cite this Article Set citation alerts
    Hailong Wang, Yuyang Wang, Yi Wang, Weiqing Xu, Shuping Xu. Modulation of hot regions in waveguide-based evanescent-field-coupled localized surface plasmons for plasmon-enhanced spectroscopy[J]. Photonics Research, 2017, 5(5): 527 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Coupling efficiency between the localized surface plasmons (LSPs) of metal nanoparticles (NPs) and incident light dominates the sensitivities of plasmon-based sensing spectroscopies and imaging techniques, e.g., surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) spectroscopy. Many endogenous features of metal NPs (e.g., size, shape, aggregation form, etc.) that have strong impacts on their LSPs have been discussed in detail in previous studies. Here, the polarization-tuned electromagnetic (EM) field that facilitates the LSP coupling is fully discussed. Numerical analyses on waveguide-based evanescent fields (WEFs) coupled with the LSPs of dispersed silver nanospheres and silver nano-hemispheres are presented and the applicability of the WEF-LSPs to plasmon-enhanced spectroscopy is discussed. Compared with LSPs under direct light excitation that only provide 3–4 times enhancement of the incidence field, the WEF-LSPs can amplify the electric field intensity about 30–90 times (equaling the enhancement factor of 106–108 in SERS intensity), which is comparable to the EM amplification of the SERS “hot spot” effect. Importantly, the strongest region of EM enhancement around silver nanospheres can be modulated from the gap region to the side surface simply by switching the incident polarization from TM to TE, which widely extends its sensing applications in surface analysis of monolayer of molecule and macromolecule detections. This technique provides us a unique way to achieve remarkable signal gains in many plasmon-enhanced spectroscopic systems in which LSPs are involved.
    E=E0exp[i(k0·rωt)],(1)

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    k0=2π/(n0λ),(2)

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    E=exp(km·r)E0exp[i(km·rωt)],(3)

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    km=km+i·km.(4)

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    2hd+φ12+φ23=2mπ,(5)

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    kw=kdsinq.(6)

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    Hailong Wang, Yuyang Wang, Yi Wang, Weiqing Xu, Shuping Xu. Modulation of hot regions in waveguide-based evanescent-field-coupled localized surface plasmons for plasmon-enhanced spectroscopy[J]. Photonics Research, 2017, 5(5): 527
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