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Conformal transformation applied to plasmonics beyond the quasistatic limit

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TLDR
In this article, the radiative losses are shown to map directly onto the power dissipated by a fictive absorbing particle in the original frame and their counterpart in the transformed frame is shown to contribute predominantly to the radioric losses.
Abstract
A general strategy has been proposed recently to design and study analytically plasmonic devices, such as kissing nanowires, which show unprecedented broadband and nanofocusing properties. These nanostructures result from a conformal transformation applied to infinite plasmonic systems. The conformal transformation tool is powerful since the whole problem is solved in the original frame under the quasistatic approximation. However, this strategy is quite restrictive in perspective of applications since it can only apply to nanostructures of a few tens of nanometers typically 20 nm. In this study, we extend the range of validity of this approach by taking into account radiation damping. The radiative losses are shown to map directly onto the power dissipated by a fictive absorbing particle in the original frame. Whereas only the surface plasmon mode was considered in previous studies, here lossy surface waves are also taken into account. Their counterpart in the transformed frame is shown to contribute predominantly to the radiative losses. The radiative reaction is then taken into account to predict the optical response of the nanostructure beyond the quasistatic limit. Radiative losses are shown to limit the light harvesting process but improve its broadband feature. The field enhancement induced by the nanostructure decreases with the structure dimension but remains significant 10 3 over a major part of the near-infrared and visible spectra. Our analytical model is compared to numerical simulations and a quantitative agreement is found for dimension up to 200 nm.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Transformation optics and subwavelength control of light

TL;DR: The concept of transformation optics that manipulates electric and magnetic field lines, rather than rays, can provide an equally intuitive understanding of subwavelength phenomena; and at the same time can be an exact description at the level of Maxwell’s equations.
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Transformation-optics description of nonlocal effects in plasmonic nanostructures

TL;DR: An insightful transformation-optics approach is developed to investigate the impact that nonlocality has on the optical properties of plasmonic nanostructures and elucidate the optimum size that maximizes its absorption and field enhancement capabilities.
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Plasmonic Hybridization between Nanowires and a Metallic Surface: A Transformation Optics Approach

TL;DR: The absorption cross-section of a nanowire placed close to a metallic surface is derived within and beyond the quasi-static limit.
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Recent advances in transformation optics

TL;DR: The most recent advances in transformation optics are reviewed, focusing on the theory, design, fabrication and characterization of transformation devices such as the carpet cloak, "Janus" lens and plasmonic cloak at optical frequencies, which allow routing light at the nanoscale.
References
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Book

Absorption and Scattering of Light by Small Particles

TL;DR: In this paper, a Potpourri of Particles is used to describe surface modes in small Particles and the Angular Dependence of Scattering is shown to be a function of the size of the particles.
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