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Optically Controlling Femtosecond Hot Electron Spatial and Momentum Distributions in Nanoplasmonic Systems

ORAL

Abstract

Plasmonic metal nanoparticles concentrate optical field energy into deeply sub-wavelength volumes, producing high densities of excited (hot) electrons and holes. While predicting and controlling the spatial and momentum distributions of these hot carriers remain significant challenges, such capabilities introduce exciting opportunities for actively controlling ultrafast currents in a variety of photocatalytic, photovoltaic, and integrated nanophotonic applications. Toward these ends, a few vignettes from recent single-nanoparticle angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy studies will be presented. Gold nanostars, for instance, behave as multi-tip photocathodes with simultaneous frequency- and polarization-selective tip hot spots for photocurrent directionality control. Gold nanorods, on the other hand, provide a unique testbed for distinguishing fundamental surface- vs. volume-mediated photoemission pathways and their corresponding hot electron spatial/momentum distributions. These investigations are complemented by a combination of classical finite element electrodynamics, semi-classical Monte Carlo, and fully quantum modeling for predictively understanding hot electron dynamics in arbitrary nanoplasmonic geometries.

Presenters

  • Jacob Pettine

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder

Authors

  • Jacob Pettine

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Priscilla Choo

    Northwestern University

  • Sean M Meyer

    University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

  • Fabio Medeghini

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Teri W. Odom

    Northwestern University

  • Catherine J. Murphy

    University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

  • David John Nesbitt

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder