4.8 Article

Surface Lattice Resonances in 3D Chiral Metacrystals for Plasmonic Sensing

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202206930

Keywords

chirality; circular dichroism; chiral photonics; chiral surface lattice resonances; focused ion beam induced deposition; plasmonic sensing

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By adjusting the relative weight of photonic and plasmonic components, the emergence of chiral surface lattice resonances (c-SLRs) in arrays of nanohelices has been achieved. This finding provides a new approach for engineering chiral plasmonic systems for sensing applications.
Chiral lattice modes are hybrid states arising from the chiral plasmonic particles assembled in ordered arrays with opportune periodicity. These resonances exhibit dependence on excitation handedness, and their observation in plasmonic lattices is strictly related to the chiroptical features of the fundamental plasmonic unit. Here, the emergence of chiral surface lattice resonances (c-SLRs) is shown in properly engineered arrays of nanohelices (NHs), fully three dimensional (3D) chiral nano-objects fabricated by focused ion beam processing. By tuning the relative weight of plasmonic and photonic components in the hybrid mode, the physical mechanism of strong diffractive coupling leading to the emergence of the lattice modes is analyzed, opening the way to the engineering of chiral plasmonic systems for sensing applications. In particular, a coupling regime is identified where the combination of a large intrinsic circular dichroism (CD) of the plasmonic resonance with a well-defined balance between the photonic quality factor (Q factor) and the plasmonic field enhancement (M) maximizes the capability of the system to discriminate refractive index (RI) changes in the surrounding medium. The results lay the foundation for exploiting CD in plasmonic lattices to high performance refractometric sensing.

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