Plasmons in one and two dimensions
H. Pfn\"ur, C. Tegenkamp, L. Vattuone

TL;DR
This paper reviews the properties and dispersion of plasmons in low-dimensional systems, highlighting their tunability, independence from Fermi level at short wavelengths, and effects of anisotropy and dimensionality on their behavior.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of plasmon behavior in 1D and 2D systems, including experimental observations and theoretical insights into their dispersion and localization.
Findings
Plasmons in 2D systems can be tuned by charge carrier concentration.
In graphene, short-wavelength plasmons are independent of Fermi level position.
Anisotropy and coupling influence plasmon dispersion and localization.
Abstract
Plasmons in low-dimensional systems respresent an important tool for coupling energy into nanostructures and the localization of energy on the scale of only a few nanometers. Contrary to ordinary surface plasmons of metallic bulk materials, their dispersion goes to zero in the long wavelength limit, thus covering a broad range of energies from terahertz to near infrared, and from mesoscopic wavelengths down to just a few nanometers. Using specific and most characteristic examples, we review first the properties of plasmons in two-dimensional (2D) metallic layers from an experimental point of view. As demonstrated, tuning of their dispersion is possible by changes of charge carrier concentration in the partially filled 2D conduction bands, but for the relativistic electron gas like in graphene only in the long wavelength limit. For short wavelengths, on the other hand, the dispersion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena · Electron and X-Ray Spectroscopy Techniques · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research
