4.7 Article

Particle simulation of plasmons

Journal

NANOPHOTONICS
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages 3303-3313

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2020-0067

Keywords

particle-in-cell; particle simulation; plasmas; plasmons; spill-out effects

Funding

  1. A*STAR SERC Young Individual Research Grants (YIRG) [A1784c0020]
  2. National Research Foundation Singapore [NRF2017-NRF-NSFC002-015, NRF2016-NRF-ANR002]
  3. MOE T2 grant [2018-T2-1-007]
  4. USA ONRG grant [N62909-19-1-2047]
  5. MOE PhD RSS
  6. Singapore Ministry of Education's Academic Research Fund Tier 1 [R-284-000-179-133]

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Particle simulation has been widely used in studying plasmas. The technique follows the motion of a large assembly of charged particles in their self-consistent electric and magnetic fields. Plasmons, collective oscillations of the free electrons in conducting media such as metals, are connected to plasmas by very similar physics, in particular, the notion of collective charge oscillations. In many cases of interest, plasmons are theoretically characterized by solving the classical Maxwell's equations, where the electromagnetic responses can be described by bulk permittivity. That approach pays more attention to fields rather than motion of electrons. In this work, however, we apply the particle simulation method to model the kinetics of plasmons, by updating both particle position and momentum (Newton-Lorentz equation) and electromagnetic fields (Ampere and Faraday laws) that are connected by current. Particle simulation of plasmons can offer insights and information that supplement those gained by traditional experimental and theoretical approaches. Specifically, we present two case studies to show its capabilities of modeling single-electron excitation of plasmons, tracing instantaneous movements of electrons to elucidate the physical dynamics of plasmons, and revealing electron spill-out effects of ultrasmall nanoparticles approaching the quantum limit. These preliminary demonstrations open the door to realistic particle simulations of plasmons.

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