Tunable subnanometer gap plasmonic metasurfaces
Dennis Doyle, Nicholas Charipar, Christos Argyropoulos, Scott A., Trammell, Rafaela Nita, Jawad Naciri, Alberto Pique, Joseph B. Herzog and, Jake Fontana

TL;DR
This study investigates the effective refractive index of self-assembled gold nanosphere metasurfaces with tunable subnanometer gaps, revealing an upper limit of 5.0 in the visible to near-infrared spectrum, with implications for light confinement and dispersion engineering.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of the maximum achievable refractive index in metasurfaces with subnanometer gaps and demonstrates the influence of ligand chemistry on optical properties.
Findings
Effective refractive index reaches up to 5.0 in the red and near-infrared spectrum.
Subnanometer gaps can be reliably measured using macro-scale metasurfaces.
Ligand modifications have minimal impact on optical response.
Abstract
The index of refraction governs the flow of light through materials. At visible and near infrared wavelengths the real part of the refractive index is limited to less than 3 for naturally occurring transparent materials, fundamentally restricting applications. Here, we carried out experiments to study the upper limit of the effective refractive index of self-assembled metasurfaces at visible and near-infrared wavelengths. The centimeter-scale metasurfaces were made of a hexagonally close packed (hcp) monolayer of gold nanospheres coated with tunable alkanethiol ligand shells, controlling the interparticle gap from 2.8 to 0.45 nm. In contrast to isolated dimer studies, the macro-scale areas allow for billions of gaps to be simultaneously probed and the hcp symmetry leads to large wavelength shifts in the resonance mode, enabling subnanometer length scale mechanisms to be reproducibly…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
