Theory of hyperbolic stratified nanostructures for surface enhanced Raman scattering
Herman M. K. Wong, Mohsen Kamandar Dezfouli, Simon Axelrod, Stephen, Hughes, Amr S. Helmy

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical study of hyperbolic stratified nanostructures for surface-enhanced Raman scattering, comparing their performance to metal nanoresonators and analyzing the effects of design parameters on enhancement.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical modal theory-based method to predict SERS enhancement factors in hyperbolic nanostructures, revealing their potential and limitations.
Findings
Hyperbolic structures can nearly double the local density of states compared to metals.
Increased LDOS in hyperbolic structures leads to higher quenching and reduced far-field SERS.
Near-field detection can significantly improve SERS enhancement with hyperbolic materials.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the enhancement of surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) using hyperbolic stratified nanostructures and compare to metal nanoresonators. The photon Green function of each nanostructure within its environment is first obtained from a semi-analytical modal theory, which is used in a quantum optics formalism of the molecule-nanostructure interaction to model the SERS spectrum. An intuitive methodology is presented for calculating the single molecule enhancement factor (SMEF), which is also able to predict known experimental SERS enhancement factors of an example gold nano-dimer. We elucidate the important figures-of-merit of the enhancement and explore these for different designs. We find that the use of hyperbolic stratified materials can enhance the photonic local density of states (LDOS) by close to 2 times in comparison to pure metal nanostructures,…
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