Plasmonic waveguides are a promising platform for integrated nanophotonic circuits and nanoscale quantum optics. Their use is however often hampered by the limited propagation length of the guided surface plasmon modes. A detailed understanding of the influence of the material quality and the waveguide geometry on the complex mode index is therefore crucial. In this letter, we present interferometric near-field measurements at telecommunication wavelength on plasmonic slot waveguides fabricated by focused ion beam milling in single-and poly-crystalline gold films. We observe a significantly better performance of the slot waveguides in the single-crystalline gold film for slot widths below 100 nm. In contrast for larger slot widths, both gold films give rise to comparable mode propagation lengths. Our experimental observations indicate that the nature of the dominant loss channel changes with increasing gap size from Ohmic to leakage radiation. Our experimental findings are reproduced by three dimensional numerical calculations.
We present freestanding metasurfaces operating at optical frequencies with a total thickness of only 40 nm. The metasurfaces are fabricated by focused ion beam milling of nanovoids in a carbon film followed by thermal evaporation of gold and plasma ashing of the carbon film. As a first example, we demonstrate a metasurface lens based on resonant V-shaped nanovoids with a focal length of 1 mm. The second example is a metasurface phase-plate consisting of appropriately oriented rectangular nanovoids that transforms a Gaussian input beam into a Laguerre-Gaussian LG−1,0 mode.
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