| Literature DB >> 24893773 |
Kevin O'Brien1, N D Lanzillotti-Kimura1, Junsuk Rho2, Haim Suchowski2, Xiaobo Yin3, Xiang Zhang3.
Abstract
Coherent acoustic phonons modulate optical, electronic and mechanical properties at ultrahigh frequencies and can be exploited for applications such as ultratrace chemical detection, ultrafast lasers and transducers. Owing to their large absorption cross-sections and high sensitivities, nanoplasmonic resonators are used to generate coherent phonons up to terahertz frequencies. Generating, detecting and controlling such ultrahigh frequency phonons has been a topic of intense research. Here we report that by designing plasmonic nanostructures exhibiting multimodal phonon interference, we can detect the spatial properties of complex phonon modes below the optical wavelength through the interplay between plasmons and phonons. This allows detection of complex nanomechanical dynamics by polarization-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy. Moreover, we demonstrate that the multiple vibrational states in nanostructures can be tailored by manipulating the geometry and dynamically selected by acousto-plasmonic coherent control. This allows enhancement, detection and coherent generation of tunable strains using surface plasmons.Year: 2014 PMID: 24893773 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919