Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials

Thesis advisor: Krzysztof Kempa === Plasmons are quantized quasiparticles of the electron density waves. When coupled with photons, plasmons become another type of quasiparticles called plasmon polaritons. At the surface of a metal, surface plasmons can be formed. They have confined propagation on t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wu, Xueyuan
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108293
id ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_108293
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1082932019-05-10T07:35:01Z Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials Wu, Xueyuan Thesis advisor: Krzysztof Kempa Text thesis 2018 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Plasmons are quantized quasiparticles of the electron density waves. When coupled with photons, plasmons become another type of quasiparticles called plasmon polaritons. At the surface of a metal, surface plasmons can be formed. They have confined propagation on the surface, analogous to water waves in a pool. Plasmonic metamaterials manipulate the surface plasmon resonances, achieving a variety of unseen optical properties in nature. For the sake of fast emerging of nano fabrication and characterization techniques in recent years, plasmonic metamaterials have been applied in a wide range of fields, such as broadband absorption in solar cells, negative index materials for cloaking, subwavelength imaging, and wave modulations. One unique property of plasmonic metamaterial is offering remarkable flexibility in controlling effective dielectric properties of matter, depending on the composite design. In this thesis, several concepts of EM response manipulation using plasmonic metamaterials are proposed and studied. These studies include: (1) a scheme assuring topologically protected photonic edge states in the visible range utilizing epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) gyroelectric metamaterials; (2) engineering low frequency dielectric function with extremely subwavelength magnetic resonators; and (3) tailoring the electron-phonon interactions (including controlling superconductivity) by introducing plasmonic resonators into the phonon systems. These works may enable a broad range of applications in both photonic and phonon systems. Metamaterials Plasmonics Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Physics. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108293
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Metamaterials
Plasmonics
spellingShingle Metamaterials
Plasmonics
Wu, Xueyuan
Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
description Thesis advisor: Krzysztof Kempa === Plasmons are quantized quasiparticles of the electron density waves. When coupled with photons, plasmons become another type of quasiparticles called plasmon polaritons. At the surface of a metal, surface plasmons can be formed. They have confined propagation on the surface, analogous to water waves in a pool. Plasmonic metamaterials manipulate the surface plasmon resonances, achieving a variety of unseen optical properties in nature. For the sake of fast emerging of nano fabrication and characterization techniques in recent years, plasmonic metamaterials have been applied in a wide range of fields, such as broadband absorption in solar cells, negative index materials for cloaking, subwavelength imaging, and wave modulations. One unique property of plasmonic metamaterial is offering remarkable flexibility in controlling effective dielectric properties of matter, depending on the composite design. In this thesis, several concepts of EM response manipulation using plasmonic metamaterials are proposed and studied. These studies include: (1) a scheme assuring topologically protected photonic edge states in the visible range utilizing epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) gyroelectric metamaterials; (2) engineering low frequency dielectric function with extremely subwavelength magnetic resonators; and (3) tailoring the electron-phonon interactions (including controlling superconductivity) by introducing plasmonic resonators into the phonon systems. These works may enable a broad range of applications in both photonic and phonon systems. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Physics.
author Wu, Xueyuan
author_facet Wu, Xueyuan
author_sort Wu, Xueyuan
title Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
title_short Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
title_full Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
title_fullStr Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
title_full_unstemmed Electromagnetic Response Design With Plasmonic Metamaterials
title_sort electromagnetic response design with plasmonic metamaterials
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108293
work_keys_str_mv AT wuxueyuan electromagneticresponsedesignwithplasmonicmetamaterials
_version_ 1719079307021647872