Plasmonic Luneburg and Eaton Lenses
Thomas Zentgraf, Yongmin Liu, Maiken H. Mikkelsen, Jason Valentine,, Xiang Zhang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the design and fabrication of plasmonic Luneburg and Eaton lenses using grey-scale lithography, enabling efficient manipulation of surface plasmon polaritons with reduced scattering losses.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to create plasmonic lenses with gradual property variation, reducing scattering losses compared to traditional abrupt-structure plasmonic elements.
Findings
Successfully fabricated plasmonic Luneburg lens for focusing SPPs.
Implemented plasmonic Eaton lens for bending SPPs.
Reduced scattering losses due to adiabatic topology tailoring.
Abstract
Plasmonics is an interdisciplinary field focusing on the unique properties of both localized and propagating surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) - quasiparticles in which photons are coupled to the quasi-free electrons of metals. In particular, it allows for confining light in dimensions smaller than the wavelength of photons in free space, and makes it possible to match the different length scales associated with photonics and electronics in a single nanoscale device. Broad applications of plasmonics have been realized including biological sensing, sub-diffraction-limit imaging, focusing and lithography, and nano optical circuitry. Plasmonics-based optical elements such as waveguides, lenses, beam splitters and reflectors have been implemented by structuring metal surfaces or placing dielectric structures on metals, aiming to manipulate the two-dimensional surface plasmon waves. However,…
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