Parameter-free quantum hydrodynamic theory for plasmonics: Electron density-dependent damping rate and diffusion coefficient
Qi-Hong Hu, Ren-Feng Liu, Xin-Yu Shan, Xuan-Ren Chen, Hong Yang, Peng, Kong, Xiao-Yun Wang, Ke Deng, Xiangyang Peng, Dong Xian, Yong-Gang Huang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a parameter-free quantum hydrodynamic theory that accurately predicts plasmonic properties of nanoscale metallic structures by incorporating density-dependent damping and diffusion, aligning well with experimental and DFT results.
Contribution
The work develops a self-consistent, parameter-free QHT with density-dependent damping and diffusion, improving accuracy in modeling plasmonic responses of nanostructures.
Findings
Accurately predicts plasmon energy and broadening for sodium nanospheres.
Shows a linear relation between resonance wavelength and aspect ratio.
Provides size-dependent frequency shift and broadening predictions for arbitrary geometries.
Abstract
Plasmonics is a rapid growing field, which has enabled both fundamental science and inventions of various quantum optoelectronic devices. An accurate and efficient method to calculate the optical response of metallic structures with feature size in the nanoscale plays an important role. Quantum hydrodynamic theory (QHT) provides an efficient description of the free-electron gas, where quantum effects of nonlocality and spill-out are taken into account. In this work, we introduce a general QHT that includes diffusion to account for the broadening, which is a key problem in practical applications of surface plasmon. We will introduce a density-dependent diffusion coefficient to give very accurate linewidth. It is a self-consistent method, in which both the ground and excited states are solved by using the same energy functional, with the kinetic energy described by the Thomas-Fermi and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Dust and Plasma Wave Phenomena
