Plasmon-induced optical anisotropy in hybrid graphene-metal nanoparticle systems

Nano Lett. 2015 May 13;15(5):3458-64. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00789. Epub 2015 Apr 29.

Abstract

Hybrid plasmonic metal-graphene systems are emerging as a class of optical metamaterials that facilitate strong light-matter interactions and are of potential importance for hot carrier graphene-based light harvesting and active plasmonic applications. Here we use femtosecond pump-probe measurements to study the near-field interaction between graphene and plasmonic gold nanodisk resonators. By selectively probing the plasmon-induced hot carrier dynamics in samples with tailored graphene-gold interfaces, we show that plasmon-induced hot carrier generation in the graphene is dominated by direct photoexcitation with minimal contribution from charge transfer from the gold. The strong near-field interaction manifests as an unexpected and long-lived extrinsic optical anisotropy. The observations are explained by the action of highly localized plasmon-induced hot carriers in the graphene on the subresonant polarizability of the disk resonator. Because localized hot carrier generation in graphene can be exploited to drive electrical currents, plasmonic metal-graphene nanostructures present opportunities for novel hot carrier device concepts.

Keywords: Graphene; anisotropy; hot carrier; hybrid; plasmonic; pump−probe.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't