Arrays of plasmonic nanocavities with very low volumes, down to λ(3)/1000, have been fabricated by soft UV nanoimprint lithography. Nearly perfect omnidirectional absorption (3-70°) is demonstrated for the fundamental mode of the cavity (λ ≃ 1.15 μm). The second-order mode exhibits a sharper resonance with strong angular dependence and total optical absorption when the critical coupling condition is fulfilled (45-50°, λ ≃ 750 nm). It leads to high refractive index sensitivity (405 nm/RIU) and figure of merit (∼21) and offers new perspectives for efficient biosensing experiments in ultralow volumes.
A two-steps wet-etching fabrication process producing high-quality GaAs microdisks is presented. We report an optical characterization of these microdisks, using the photoluminescence of InAs quantum boxes as an internal light source. Thanks to an improved smoothness of the microdisk sidewall, cavity Q’s as high as 12 000 are observed, which opens very challenging novel application prospects for semiconductor microdisks.
In this Letter, we demonstrate experimentally that a patchwork of four metal-insulator-metal patches leads to an unpolarized wideband omnidirectional infrared absorption. Our structure absorbs 70% of the incident light on a 2.5 μm bandwidth at 8.5 μm. It paves the way to the design of wideband efficient plasmonic absorbers in the infrared spectrum.
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