Plasmon
From Free net encyclopedia
In physics, the plasmon is the quasiparticle resulting from the quantization of plasma oscillations. They are collective oscillations of the free electron gas.
Contents |
Explanation
Plasmons play a large role in the optical properties of metals. Light of frequency below the plasma frequency is reflected, because the electrons in the metal screen the electric field of the light. Light of frequency above the plasma frequency is transmitted, because the electrons cannot respond fast enough to screen it. In most metals, the plasma frequency is in the ultraviolet, making them shiny in the visible range. On the other hand, some metals, such as copper, have a plasmon frequency in the visible range, yielding their distinct color. For other metals, such as gold, the plasma frequency lies deeply in the ultraviolet, but geometric factors come into play which reduce the plasmon frequency to the visible. In doped semiconductors, the plasma frequency is usually in the infrared.
The plasmon energy can often be estimated in the free electron model as:
- <math>
E_{p} = \hbar \sqrt{\frac{n e^{2}}{m\epsilon_0}} </math>
where <math>n</math> is the valence electron density, <math>e</math> is the elementary charge, <math>m</math> is the electron mass and <math>\epsilon_0</math> the permittivity of free space.
Surface plasmons
Surface plasmons are those plasmons that are confined to surfaces and that interact strongly with light resulting in a polariton. They occur at the interface of a material with a positive dielectric constant with that of a negative dielectric constant (usually a metal or doped dielectric). They play a role in surface-enhanced Raman scattering and in explaining anomalies in diffraction from metal gratings, among other things. Surface plasmon resonance is used by biochemists to detect the presence of a molecule on a surface.
Possible applications
Plasmons have been considered as a means of transmitting information on computer chips, since plasmon wires can be much smaller than conventional wires and can support much higher frequencies (into the 100 THz regime, while conventional wires become very lossy in the 10s of GHz). They have also been proposed as a means of high resolution lithography and microscopy due to their extremely small wavelengths. Both of these applications have seen successful demonstrations in the lab environment.
External links
- http://home.hccnet.nl/ja.marquart/BasicSPR/BasicSpr01.htm
- http://www.qub.ac.uk/mp/con/plasmon/sp1.html
- http://www.photonics.com/spectra/research/XQ/ASP/preaid.101/QX/read.htm
- Plasmonic computer chips move closer
- Progress at Stanford for use in computers
- Slashdot: A Plasmonic Revolution for Computer Chips?
- A Microscope from Flatland Physical Review Focus, January 24 2005
- http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Invisibility_shield_gets_blueprint
Used extensively to measure the thickness on monolayers on colloid films, such as screening and quantifying protein binding events
References
Template:Quasiparticlede:Plasmon (Physik) pl:Plazmon ru:Плазмон