4.8 Article

Mode Modification of Plasmonic Gap Resonances Induced by Strong Coupling with Molecular Excitons

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 3246-3251

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b00858

Keywords

Strong coupling; gap resonances; J-aggregates; nanoparticles; spatial mode modification; far-field patterns

Funding

  1. New Zealand's Marsden Fund [UOO-1214]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61425023, 61575177, 61275030, 61235007]
  3. Priming Partnership Pilot Funding (University of Otago)
  4. New Idea Research Funding (Dodd-Walls Centre for photonic and quantum technologies)
  5. Open Fund of China State Key Laboratory of Modern Optical Instrumentation

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Plasmonic cavities can be used to control the atom-photon coupling process at the nanoscale, since they provide ultrahigh density of optical states in an exceptionally small mode volume. Here we demonstrate strong coupling between molecular excitons and plasmonic resonances (so-called plexcitonic coupling) in a film-coupled nanocube cavity, which can induce profound and significant spectral and spatial modifications to the plasmonic gap modes. Within the spectral span of a single gap mode in the nanotube-film cavity with a 3-nm wide gap, the introduction of narrow-band J-aggregate dye molecules not only enables an anti-crossing behavior in the spectral response, but also splits the single spatial mode into two distinct modes that are easily identified by their far-field scattering profiles. Simulation results confirm the experimental findings and the sensitivity of the plexcitonic coupling is explored using digital control of the gap spacing. Our work opens up a new perspective to study the strong coupling process, greatly extending the functionality of nanophotonic systems, with the potential to be applied in cavity quantum electrodynamic systems.

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