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Figure caption:
Optical amplification is critical in making light bound in a plasmonic
mode travel over sizable distances. The new plasmonic amplifier
developed by a team of researchers from the University of Iceland,
Harvard University, the University of Cologne and the Fraunhofer
Institute in Germany consists of a thin gold film and a highly
fluorescent orange-emitting polymer. When the structure is exposed to
intense green laser light, the intensity of plasmonic waves traveling
along the waveguide is increased by stimulated emission of the optical
energy stored in the fluorescent polymer.
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Breakthrough in nano-optics
University of Iceland researchers develop
plasmonic amplifier
Reykjavik - Researchers at the University of Iceland have demonstrated
net optical amplification in a plasmonic waveguide. The results of the
team around Kristjan Leosson and Malte Gather, which were published in
the journal Nature Photonics this week, represent an important
breakthrough in the field of plasmonics. Optical amplification is the
only feasible strategy to make light travel over sizable distances
when it is bound in a plasmonic mode. Achieving such a macroscopic
propagation of surface plasma waves is critical for many applications
of the emerging plasmonics technology, which range from compact
communication devices and optical computing to the detection and
characterization of cells, virus particles or even single molecules.
Research on plasmonics, a relatively new branch of optics, has
received an increasing level of international attention over the last
decade. This interest is mainly driven by the fact that surface
plasmons, travelling along the interface between a metal and a
dielectric, allow confining optical energy to volumes that are
significantly smaller than those accessible with conventional
dielectric waveguiding structures such as optical fibers. Apart from
being of fundamental interest on its own, tightly focused optical
energy can be used as a ?nano-probe? which provides valuable
measurements in fields like solid-state physics, chemistry and the
life sciences. In addition, the tight confinement of the optical field
is an interesting feature as it promises optical devices with reduced
dimensions. This is of particular relevance for the field of optical
communications, optical computing and hybrid microelectronic/optical
circuits. However, under normal circumstances, optical energy travels
over very short distances in plasmonic waveguides, before it is
absorbed due to Ohmic loss in the metal.
Although clever design can somewhat increase the useful length of
plasmonic waveguides, it is widely accepted that the only way to
completely overcome this problem is to add a mechanism that
continuously amplifies the light as it travels along the plasmonic
waveguide. However, integrating such plasmonic amplification has
turned out to be a challenging task. The team consisting of
researchers from the University of Iceland, from Harvard University,
and from the University of Cologne and the Fraunhofer Institute in
Germany, developed a structure that provides sufficient amplification
to overcome the intrinsic absorption of a plasmonic waveguide. In
fact, the optical amplification is sufficient to provide a net gain of
the plasmon-bound light as it travels along the waveguide. The
researchers used a structure consisting of an ultra-thin gold film
that was embedded in a highly fluorescent polymer, optically pumped by
an ultrafast laser source. The structure was designed to channel the
light generated by the fluorescent polymer to the plasmonic waveguide.
As the plasmonic wave travels along the waveguide, its intensity is
increased by stimulated emission of the optical energy stored in the
fluorescent polymer.
"For many years the propagation loss issue in plasmonic waveguides has
been a major hurdle for the development of devices that make use of
surface plasmon effects," says Kristjan Leosson. "The key to the
success of our work was that we found a way to embed the plasmonic
waveguides into an amplifying fluorescent polymer without affecting
the properties of the waveguide too much," explains Malte Gather.
Press contact:
Malte Gather
Kristjan Leosson
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