Paper
9 May 2005 Antenna-based near-field scanning optical microscopy (Invited Paper)
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Abstract
Some time ago a near-field optical imaging technique had been introduced (Appl. Phys. Lett. 73, 1669 (1998)), which achieves high spatial resolution and excellent sensitivity by exploiting the highly localized and mutual near-field interactions between a Au-nanosphere and a sharp Si-probe under evanescent field illumination. Specifically, the scattering of Au-nanoparticles is significantly enhanced by the presence of a sharp nanoscopic probe demonstrating that the probe acts as an efficient antenna. The present study focuses on the underlying physics of the original results by investigating more systematically nanoparticle-probe interactions: (1) The polarization pattern of the scattered field of an evanescent wave excited Si-probe is studied, which demonstrates that the probe scatters as a single dipole. (2) The enhanced scattering signal is measured as a function of sample size, which allows us to predict the signal strength for different size samples. (3) The wavelength dependence of the probe-sample scattering is investigated by exciting Au-nanospheres on (@543 nm) and off plasmon resonance (@633nm). The data shows a pronounced wavelength dependence reflecting the near-field spectrum of the Au-nanocrystals. (4) Finally, a simple, but intuitive model describing these mutual near-field interactions is presented, which explains qualitatively both the size and wavelength dependence of the enhanced scattering signals.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Hendrik F. Hamann "Antenna-based near-field scanning optical microscopy (Invited Paper)", Proc. SPIE 5766, Testing, Reliability, and Application of Micro- and Nano-Material Systems III, (9 May 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.607421
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KEYWORDS
Scattering

Near field

Near field scanning optical microscopy

Data modeling

Picosecond phenomena

Light scattering

Atomic force microscopy

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