posted on 2017-04-25, 00:00authored byYi Yang, Owen D. Miller, Thomas Christensen, John D. Joannopoulos, Marin Soljačić
Material
losses in metals are a central bottleneck in plasmonics for many applications.
Here we propose and theoretically demonstrate that metal losses can
be successfully mitigated with dielectric particles on metallic films,
giving rise to hybrid dielectric–metal resonances. In the far
field, they yield strong and efficient scattering, beyond even the
theoretical limits of all-metal and all-dielectric structures. In
the near field, they offer high Purcell factor (>5000), high quantum
efficiency (>90%), and highly directional emission at visible and
infrared wavelengths. Their quality factors can be readily tailored
from plasmonic-like (∼10) to dielectric-like (∼103), with wide control over the individual resonant coupling
to photon, plasmon, and dissipative channels. Compared with conventional
plasmonic nanostructures, such resonances show robustness against
detrimental nonlocal effects and provide higher field enhancement
at extreme nanoscopic sizes and spacings. These hybrid resonances
equip plasmonics with high efficiency, which has been the predominant
goal since the field’s inception.