论文标题
纳米原子中氮的烟效效应,与光子相关的阴性发光揭示的均与传播和局部表面等离子体耦合
Purcell effect of nitrogen-vacancy centers in nanodiamond coupled to propagating and localized surface plasmons revealed by photon-correlation cathodoluminescence
论文作者
论文摘要
我们测量了阴极发光强度的二阶相关功能,并通过比较具有金属结构和不具有金属结构的量子发射器的寿命来研究purcell效应。由于量子发射极与等离子体结构的偶联导致电磁局部密度的增加导致发射极寿命的缩短,这称为Purcell效应。由于等离子增强电场远低于光的波长,因此量子发射极寿命在纳米级范围内发生了变化。在这项研究中,我们将扫描(传播)电子显微镜中的阴极发光与汉伯里棕色扭转干涉仪结合在一起,以测量使用纳米表和纳秒分辨率的purcell效应。我们使用纳米原子座中包含的氮散布中心作为量子发射器,并在不同的环境中比较了它们的寿命:在薄薄的Sio2膜上,在厚实的平面银膜上,并嵌入银膜中。在用银样品中清楚地观察到了氮呈现中心的寿命减少。我们通过分析计算和数值模拟评估了寿命,并揭示了发射器与繁殖和局部表面等离子体结合的percell效应。这是第一个实验结果,该结果表明,由于纳米座中的氮 - 脱位中心与纳米分辨率分辨率的表面等离子体极性子之间的耦合引起的purcell效应。
We measured the second-order correlation function of the cathodoluminescence intensity and investigated the Purcell effect by comparing the lifetimes of quantum emitters with and without metal structure. The increase in the electromagnetic local density of state due to the coupling of a quantum emitter with a plasmonic structure causes a shortening of the emitter lifetime, which is called the Purcell effect. Since the plasmon-enhanced electric field is confined well below the wavelength of light, the quantum emitter lifetime is changed in the nanoscale range. In this study, we combined cathodoluminescence in scanning (transmission) electron microscopy with Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry to measure the Purcell effect with nanometer and nanosecond resolutions. We used nitrogen-vacancy centers contained in nanodiamonds as quantum emitters and compared their lifetime in different environments: on a thin SiO2 membrane, on a thick flat silver film, and embedded in a silver film. The lifetime reductions of nitrogen-vacancy centers were clearly observed in the samples with silver. We evaluated the lifetime by analytical calculation and numerical simulations and revealed the Purcell effects of emitters coupled to propagating and localized surface plasmons. This is the first experimental result showing the Purcell effect due to the coupling between nitrogen-vacancy centers in nanodiamonds and surface plasmon polaritons with nanometer resolution.