4.6 Article

Plasmonic heptamer-arranged nanoholes in a gold film on the end-facet of a photonic crystal fiber

Journal

OPTICS LETTERS
Volume 46, Issue 18, Pages 4482-4485

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OL.426960

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Resonant plasmonic nanostructures were fabricated on the end-facet of a solid-core polarization-maintaining photonic crystal fiber, demonstrating rich sets of Fano resonances when excited by supercontinuum light and offering potential sensing applications with a shift in spectra when the medium covering the nanoholes changes.
We use the end-facet of a solid-core polarization-maintaining photonic crystal fiber (PM-PCF) as a platform on which to fabricate resonant plasmonic nanostructures. Solid-core PM-PCFs can be excited in a polarization-aligned singlemodeby supercontinuum light, so they arewell-suited to the wavelength-interrogation of resonant plasmonic nanostructures, especially supporting complex spectra over a broad spectral range. The nanostructures implemented consist of an array of heptamer-arranged nanoholes formed in a thin Au film. The nanoholes were milled with a He+ focused ion beam, with the array polarization-aligned in situ to cover the solid core of the PM-PCF. Transmittance spectra, measured using a supercontinuum source coupled to the input of the PM-PCF, reveal a rich set of Fano resonances associated with localized and propagating surface plasmons. The measured spectra are compared to computations in order to identify the resonant modes. The spectra redshift as the medium covering the nanoholes changes from air to oil, anticipating application to sensing. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America

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