4.8 Article

Atomic-Scale Lightning Rod Effect in Plasmonic Picocavities: A Classical View to a Quantum Effect

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 585-595

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07401

Keywords

nanoplasmonics; picocavities; lightning rod effect; ab initio calculations; effective mode volume

Funding

  1. MINECO [FIS2016-80174-P, MAT2016-78293-C6-4-R]
  2. grant of Consolidated Groups at UPV/EHU of the Basque Government [IT-756-13]
  3. U.S. Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology [70NANB15H32]
  4. University of the Basque Country
  5. DIPC
  6. CFM
  7. Departamento de Educacion of the Basque Government
  8. Euskampus
  9. Gipuzkoako Foru Aldundia through the FEDER funding scheme of the European Union, Una manera de hacer Europa

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Plasmonic gaps are known to produce nanoscale localization and enhancement of optical fields, providing small effective mode volumes of about a few hundred nm(3). Atomistic quantum calculations based on time-dependent density functional theory reveal the effect of subnanometric localization of electromagnetic fields due to the presence of atomic-scale features at the interfaces of plasmonic gaps. Using a classical model, we explain this as a nonresonant lightning rod effect at the atomic scale that produces an extra enhancement over that of the plasmonic background. The near-field distribution of atomic-scale hot spots around atomic features is robust against dynamical screening and spill-out effects and follows the potential landscape determined by the electron density around the atomic sites. A detailed comparison of the field distribution around atomic hot spots from full quantum atomistic calculations and from the local classical approach considering the geometrical profile of the atoms' electronic density validates the use of a classical framework to determine the effective mode volume in these extreme subnanometric optical cavities. This finding is of practical importance for the community of surface-enhanced molecular spectroscopy and quantum nanophotonics, as it provides an adequate description of the local electromagnetic fields around atomic-scale features with use of simplified classical methods.

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