Hot electrons generated within plasmonic
structures possess a high
kinetic energy that can be employed to drive and catalyze a huge range
of physicochemical processes at the metallic interface. Up to now,
these photogenerated hot carriers were mainly generated within simple
plasmonic nanoparticles where hot carrier localization coincides spatially
with the position optical excitation. A current challenge for the
development of future plasmonic-based hot electron devices requires
the ability for a delocalized hot carrier production to control on
a large-distance their spatial distribution. Here, we demonstrate
the remote generation of hot electrons by launching a propagative
surface plasmon on a gold waveguide. Such hot carriers can be produced
at distances of several microns from the excitation. Moreover, using
far- and near-field hyperspectral microscopy, we show that hot carriers
present spatial and energy distributions driven by the propagating
plasmon field distribution itself. This opens the door to the engineering
of complex hot carrier devices through the management of the plasmon
propagation for next level hot-electron-based applications.
When
gold nanowires are excited with a tightly focused femtosecond
laser a distributed nonlinear photoluminescence (N-PL) develops throughout
the entire structure. A complete spaced-resolved analysis of the spectral
signature of the nanowire nonlinear response is carried out to understand
the origin of the distributed nonlinear response. We discuss various
mechanisms to explain the experimental data and unambiguously demonstrate
that the spatial and spectral extension of the N-PL in the nanowire
are mainly dictated by the propagation of a surface plasmon excited
at the pump wavelength. We also present experimental signature of
near-field excitation of a broadband continuum of surface plasmons
excited locally throughout the N-PL emission spectrum.
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