Self-Quenching Effect of the Decay of Localized Surface Plasmons: Classical and Quantum Perspectives
Krystyna Kolwas

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum-informed model for localized surface plasmon decay in metal nanoparticles, revealing size-dependent self-quenching effects due to combined radiative and non-radiative damping channels.
Contribution
It provides an analytical, self-consistent framework bridging classical and quantum perspectives for plasmon decay, emphasizing the bosonic nature of plasmonic quasi-particles.
Findings
Size-dependent suppression of damping in higher multipolar modes.
Analytical expressions for total damping rates including self-quenching effects.
Extension of Fermi's Golden Rule to self-generated nano-cavities.
Abstract
This study presents a self-consistent, quantum-informed model for the decay dynamics of localized surface plasmons (LSPs) in spherical metal nanoparticles (NPs), described as plasmonic quasi-particles (PQPs). By bridging classical electrodynamics description for quasi-normal modes (retardation effects included) with a quantum emitter perspective, this framework provides an analytically tractable description of the damping of the dissipative confined plasmonic systems. In addition to its significance for emission control, the model emphasizes the bosonic characteristics of plasmonic quasi-particles, which are coherent many-electron excitations of the states of quasi-normal modes. Unlike conventional cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED), where the emitter and cavity exist as separate systems, a plasmonic quasi-particle functions as a quantum emitter embedded within a self-created…
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