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Articles

Theoretical and experimental analysis of subwavelength bowtie-shaped antennas

, , , &
Pages 1686-1698 | Received 13 Oct 2014, Accepted 10 May 2015, Published online: 07 Jul 2015
 

Abstract

Recently, bowtie-shaped apertures have received significant attention due to their extraordinary ability to generate dramatic field enhancement and light confinement in nanometer scale. In this article, we investigate both experimentally and theoretically nearfield and farfield responses of bowtie-shaped apertures in detail. We study the role of bowtie gap in creating large and highly accessible local electromagnetic fields. In order to experimentally excite strong local fields, we introduce a high-resolution and lift-off free fabrication method which enables bowtie apertures with gap sizes down to sub-10 nm. We also show that for identical geometries, bowtie-shaped apertures support much stronger local electromagnetic fields compared to particle-based bowtie-shaped antennas. We investigate the role of polarization on the gap effect, which plays the dominant role for creating strong nearfield intensities. Finally, we introduce a mechanism to fine-tune the optical response of bowtie apertures through geometrical parameters.

Acknowledgement

Authors acknowledge the Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) under research grants 113E277. Altug Research Group acknowledges Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL).

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