Organic Anisotropic Excitonic Optical Nanoantennas
Journal article, 2022

Optical nanoantennas provide control of light at the nanoscale, which makes them important for diverse areas ranging from photocatalysis and flat metaoptics to sensors and biomolecular tweezing. They have traditionally been limited to metallic and dielectric nanostructures that sustain plasmonic and Mie resonances, respectively. More recently, nanostructures of organic J-aggregate excitonic materials have been proposed capable of also supporting nanooptical resonances, although their advance has been hampered from difficulty in nanostructuring. Here, the authors present the realization of organic J-aggregate excitonic nanostructures, using nanocylinder arrays as model system. Extinction spectra show that they can sustain both plasmon-like resonances and dielectric resonances, owing to the material providing negative and large positive permittivity regions at the different sides of its exciton resonance. Furthermore, it is found that the material is highly anisotropic, leading to hyperbolic and elliptic permittivity regions. Nearfield analysis using optical simulation reveals that the nanostructures therefore support hyperbolic localized surface exciton resonances and elliptic Mie resonances, neither of which has been previously demonstrated for this type of material. The anisotropic nanostructures form a new type of optical nanoantennas, which combined with the presented fabrication process opens up for applications such as fully organic excitonic metasurfaces.

J-aggregates

localized surface exciton resonances

Mie resonances

nanoantennas

hyperbolic polaritons

Author

Evan S.H. Kang

Linköping University

Chungbuk National University

Sriram Kesarimangalam

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Chemical Biology

Inho Jeon

Chungbuk National University

Jehan Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

Shangzhi Chen

Linköping University

Kyoung-Ho Kim

Chungbuk National University

Ka-Hyun Kim

Chungbuk National University

Hyun Seok Lee

Chungbuk National University

Fredrik Westerlund

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Chemical Biology

Magnus P. Jonsson

Linköping University

Advanced Science

2198-3844 (ISSN) 21983844 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 23 2201907

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Subject Categories

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Other Physics Topics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1002/advs.202201907

PubMed

35619287

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9