Browsing by Subject "Nanoantenna"
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Item Unknown Hybridization of fano and vibrational resonances in surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy of streptavidin monolayers on metamaterial substrates(2014) Alici, K. B.We present spectral hybridization of organic and inorganic resonant materials and related bio-sensing mechanism. We utilized a bound protein (streptavidin) and a Fano-resonant metasurface to illustrate the concept. The technique allows us to investigate the vibrational modes of the streptavidin and how they couple to the underlying metasurface. This optical, label-free, nonperturbative technique is supported by a coupled mode-theory analysis that provides information on the structure and orientation of bound proteins. We can also simultaneously monitor the binding of analytes to the surface through monitoring the shift of the metasurface resonance. All of this data opens up interesting opportunities for applications in biosensing, molecular electronics and proteomics. © 2014 IEEE.Item Unknown Nanoantenna couplers for metal-insulator-metal waveguide interconnects(SPIE, 2010) Onbasli, M.C.; Okyay, Ali KemalState-of-the-art copper interconnects suffer from increasing spatial power dissipation due to chip downscaling and RC delays reducing operation bandwidth. Wide bandwidth, minimized Ohmic loss, deep sub-wavelength confinement and high integration density are key features that make metal-insulator-metal waveguides (MIM) utilizing plasmonic modes attractive for applications in on-chip optical signal processing. Size-mismatch between two fundamental components (micron-size fibers and a few hundred nanometers wide waveguides) demands compact coupling methods for implementation of large scale on-chip optoelectronic device integration. Existing solutions use waveguide tapering, which requires more than 4λ-long taper distances. We demonstrate that nanoantennas can be integrated with MIM for enhancing coupling into MIM plasmonic modes. Two-dimensional finite-difference time domain simulations of antennawaveguide structures for TE and TM incident plane waves ranging from λ = 1300 to 1600 nm were done. The same MIM (100-nm-wide Ag/100-nm-wide SiO2/100-nm-wide Ag) was used for each case, while antenna dimensions were systematically varied. For nanoantennas disconnected from the MIM; field is strongly confined inside MIM-antenna gap region due to Fabry-Perot resonances. Major fraction of incident energy was not transferred into plasmonic modes. When the nanoantennas are connected to the MIM, stronger coupling is observed and E-field intensity at outer end of core is enhanced more than 70 times. © 2010 SPIE.Item Unknown Resonant optical nanoantennas and applications(Bilkent University, 2010) Kılınç, Murat CelalBeing one of the fundamentals of electrical engineering, an antenna is a metallic shape structured to transmit or receive electromagnetic waves. Thanks to the recent advances in nano fabrication and nano imaging, metallic structures can be defined with sizes smaller to that of visible light, wavelengths of several nanometers. This opens up the possibility of the engineering of antennas working at optical wavelengths. Nanoantennas could be thought of optical wavelength equivalent of common antennas. Today physics, chemistry, material science and biology use optical nanoantennas to control light waves. Optical nanoantennas are tailored for many technological applications that include generation, manipulation and detection of light. The near field enhancement of resonant optical nanoantennas at specific wavelengths is their most promising advantage that attracts technological applications. In this thesis, we study the resonance characteristics of optical nanoantennas and investigate the governing factors by numerical calculations. We also evaluate radiated electric field from the resonating nanoantenna. Finally, we employ the resonant near field enhancement in optical nonlinear generation. The fabrication of nanoantennas with FIB milling is also explored.