Imaging and Controlling Ultrafast Electron Pulses Emitted from Plasmonic Nanostructures

Nano Lett. 2023 Aug 23;23(16):7327-7333. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c01644. Epub 2023 Aug 3.

Abstract

We experimentally study photoemission from gold nanodisk arrays using space-, time-, and energy-resolved photoemission electron microscopy. When excited by a plasmonic resonant infrared (IR) laser pulse, plasmonic hotspots are generated owing to local surface plasmon resonance. Photoelectrons emitted from each plasmonic hotspot form a nanoscale and ultrashort electron pulse. When the system is excited by an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) laser pulse, a uniformly distributed photoelectron cloud is formed across the sample surface. When excited by the IR and EUV laser pulses together, both the photoemission image and kinetic energy vary significantly for the IR laser-generated electrons depending on the time delay between the two laser pulses. These observations are well explained by the Coulomb interaction with the EUV laser-generated electron cloud. Our study offers a feasible approach to manipulate the energy of electron pulse emitted from a plasmonic nanostructure on an ultrafast time scale.

Keywords: nano-optics; photoemission; plasmonic nanostructure; ultrafast nanoscale electron pulse.