Temperature-dependent optical properties of gold thin films
Harsha Reddy, Urcan Guler, Alexander V. Kildishev, Alexandra, Boltasseva, Vladimir M. Shalaev

TL;DR
This study investigates how the optical properties of gold thin films change with temperature, revealing significant increases in the imaginary part of the dielectric function at high temperatures, which impacts plasmonic device performance.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive temperature-dependent optical constants for gold thin films across various thicknesses, with analytical models for accurate simulations.
Findings
Imaginary part of dielectric function increases significantly at high temperatures.
Thinner films show more variable temperature responses in optical properties.
Models enable improved simulation of gold nanophotonics at elevated temperatures.
Abstract
Understanding the temperature dependence of the optical properties of thin metal films is critical for designing practical devices for high temperature applications in a variety of research areas, including plasmonics and near-field radiative heat transfer. Even though the optical properties of bulk metals at elevated temperatures have been studied, the temperature-dependent data for thin metal films, with thicknesses ranging from few tens to few hundreds of nanometers, is largely missing. In this work we report on the optical constants of single- and polycrystalline gold thin films at elevated temperatures in the wavelength range from 370 to 2000 nm. Our results show that while the real part of the dielectric function changes marginally with increasing temperature, the imaginary part changes drastically. For 200-nm-thick single- and polycrystalline gold films the imaginary part of the…
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