2008 APS March Meeting 
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session H35: Focus Session: Negative Index Materials III
8:00 AM–10:48 AM, 
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Morial Convention Center 
Room: 227
Sponsoring
Unit: 
FIAP
Chair: Igor Smolyaninov, BAE Systems
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.H35.1
Abstract: H35.00001 : Plasmonic metamaterials with tuneable optical properties
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
  
Abstract   
Author:
Anatoly Zayats
(The Queen's University of Belfast)
Negative refraction in metamaterials has recently 
attracted significant attention due to its possible numerous 
applications in high-resolution imaging and photolithography 
with the so-called ``perfect lenses,'' for electromagnetic 
shielding (invisibility cloak), optical signal manipulation, 
etc. Among various realizations of negative index materials, 
plasmonic nanostructures play a prominent role as they allow 
negative refraction properties to be engineered in the visible 
and near infrared spectral ranges. The coupling of light to 
plasmonic modes, that are collective electronic excitations in 
metallic nanostructures, provides the possibility to confine 
the electromagnetic field on the sub-wavelength scale and 
manipulate it with high precision to achieve the desired mode 
dispersion and, thus, reflection, absorption and transmission 
properties of the nanostructures. 
In this talk we will discuss various pathways to control 
dispersion of the electromagnetic waves in plasmonic 
metamaterials, including plasmon polaritonic crystals and 
plasmonic nanorod arrays, and the approaches to active 
tuneability of their optical properties using optical and 
electric control signals. Both approaches take advantage of the 
very high sensitivity of surface plasmon mode dispersion on the 
refractive index of the dielectric adjacent to metallic 
nanostructure. Hybridization of plasmonic nanostructures with 
molecular species exhibiting nonlinear optical response allows 
the development of metamaterials with high effective nonlinear 
susceptibility due to the electromagnetic field enhancement 
related to plasmonic excitations. Signal and control light are 
then coupled to plasmonic modes that strongly interact via 
nonlinearity introduced by the hybridization. Concurrently, the 
use of electro-optically active dielectrics incorporated into 
plasmonic nanostructures provides the route to control optical 
signals electronically. Plasmonic metamaterials with tuneable 
optical properties can be used to control negative refraction 
and electromagnetic field propagation in various applications 
in nanophotonics, optoelectronics and optical communications.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.H35.1