Plasmon Polaritons in Disordered Nanoparticle Assemblies
Tanay Paul, Allison M. Green, Delia J. Milliron, Thomas M. Truskett

TL;DR
This study investigates how structural disorder in nanoparticle assemblies affects plasmon-polariton formation and optical properties, revealing that disorder broadens spectral features but does not alter fundamental dispersion or coupling strength.
Contribution
We develop large-scale simulations combining Brownian dynamics and superposition T-matrix methods to analyze disorder effects on plasmon-polaritons in nanoparticle multilayers.
Findings
Disorder broadens the polaritonic stop band and hot-spot distribution.
Polariton dispersion and coupling strength are unaffected by disorder.
Gold and ITO nanocrystal assemblies exhibit different coupling behaviors due to damping.
Abstract
Multilayer assemblies of metal nanoparticles can act as photonic structures, where collective plasmon resonances hybridize with cavity modes to create plasmon-polariton states. For sufficiently strong coupling, plasmon polaritons qualitatively alter the optical properties of light-matter systems, with applications ranging from sensing to solar energy. However, results from experimental studies have raised questions about the role of nanoparticle structural disorder in plasmon-polariton formation and light-matter coupling in plasmonic assemblies. Understanding how disorder affects optical properties has practical implications since methods for assembling low-defect nanoparticle superlattices are slow and scale poorly. Modeling realistic disorder requires large system sizes, which is challenging using conventional electromagnetic simulations. We employ Brownian dynamics simulations to…
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