5 pagesInternational audienceWe present an all-optical method to investigate the GHz dynamics of the elastic contact between a single metallic nanoparticle and a substrate. A resonant excitation mechanism driven by the 82-MHz Dirac comb of the femtosecond oscillator is associated with femtosecond pump-probe experiments performed in a transient reflectivity configuration. This scheme allows us not only to detect the known breathing mode of the nanoparticle but also to unravel the existence of an axial oscillation of the nanoparticle through an intrinsic common-path interferometer.We measured the eigenfrequency and the lifetime of this vertical motion, which are related to the contact stiffness and hysteresis, and to the acoustic leakage at the nanoparticle-substrate interface. A modeling of the axial oscillation in the framework of classical adhesion theories predicts a simple power law dependence of the axial eigenfrequency with respect to the breathing mode frequency. Measurements performed for single particles with radii ranging from 60 to 700 nm are in strong agreement with this prediction
We demonstrate that fluorophores coupled to plasmonic nanoparticles promote resonant excitation energy transfer processes leading to low-loss building block metamaterials. Experimental observations of Rayleigh scattering enhancement, accompanied by an increase in transmission as function of the gain, clearly reveal optical loss compensation effects. Fluorescence quenching is also observed in gain assisted nanoparticles owing to the increase in nonradiative decay rate triggered by plasmonic resonances. The gain induced transparency at optical frequencies is an unambiguous consequence of loss reduction in metamaterial subunits, representing a promising step to enable a wide range of electromagnetic properties of optical metamaterials.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.