Antoine Canaguier-Durand
University of Strasbourg
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Publication
Featured researches published by Antoine Canaguier-Durand.
New Journal of Physics | 2013
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; James A. Hutchison; Cyriaque Genet; Thomas W. Ebbesen
We calculate optical forces and torques exerted on a chiral dipole by chiral light fields and reveal genuine chiral forces in combining the chiral contents of both light field and dipolar matter. Here, the optical chirality is characterized in a general way through the definition of optical chirality density and chirality flow. We show, in particular, that both terms have mechanical effects associated, respectively, with reactive and dissipative components of the chiral forces. Remarkably, these chiral force components are directly related to standard observables: optical rotation for the reactive component and circular dichroism for the dissipative one. As a consequence, the resulting forces and torques are dependent on the enantiomeric form of the chiral dipole. This suggests promising strategies for using chiral light forces to mechanically separate chiral objects according to their enantiomeric form.
Advanced Materials | 2013
James A. Hutchison; Andrea Liscio; Tal Schwartz; Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Cyriaque Genet; Vincenzo Palermo; Paolo Samorì; Thomas W. Ebbesen
The tuning of the molecular material work-function via strong coupling with vacuum electromagnetic fields is demonstrated. Kelvin probe microscopy extracts the surface potential (SP) changes of a photochromic molecular film on plasmonic hole arrays and inside Fabry-Perot cavities. Modulating the optical cavity resonance or the photochromic film effectively tunes the work-function, suggesting a new tool for tailoring material properties.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Eloïse Devaux; Jino George; Yantao Pang; James A. Hutchison; Tal Schwartz; Cyriaque Genet; Nadine Wilhelms; Jean-Marie Lehn; Thomas W. Ebbesen
The thermodynamics of strong coupling between molecules and the vacuum field is analyzed and the Gibbs free energy, the enthalpy, and entropy of the coupling process are determined for the first time. The thermodynamic parameters are a function of the Rabi splitting and the microscopic solvation. The results provide a new framework for understanding light-molecule strong coupling.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Paulo A. Maia Neto; Ines Cavero-Pelaez; Astrid Lambrecht; Serge Reynaud
We give an exact series expansion of the Casimir force between plane and spherical metallic surfaces in the nontrivial situation where the sphere radius R, the plane-sphere distance L and the plasma wavelength lambda(P) have arbitrary relative values. We then present numerical evaluation of this expansion for not too small values of L/R. For metallic nanospheres where R, L and lambda(P) have comparable values, we interpret our results in terms of a correlation between the effects of geometry beyond the proximity force approximation and of finite reflectivity due to material properties. We also discuss the interest of our results for the current Casimir experiments which are performed with spheres of large radius R>>L.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Paulo A. Maia Neto; Astrid Lambrecht; Serge Reynaud
The thermal Casimir force between two metallic plates is known to depend on the description of material properties. For large separations the dissipative Drude model leads to a force a factor of 2 smaller than the lossless plasma model. Here we show that the plane-sphere geometry, in which current experiments are performed, decreases this ratio to a factor of 3/2, as revealed by exact numerical and large-distance analytical calculations. For perfect reflectors, we find a repulsive contribution of thermal photons to the force and negative entropy values at intermediate distances.
Physical Review A | 2013
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Aurélien Cuche; Cyriaque Genet; Thomas W. Ebbesen
We calculate the optical force and torque applied to an electric dipole by a spinning light field. We find that the dissipative part of the force depends on the orbital energy flow of the field only, because the latter is related to the phase gradient generalized for such a light field. As for the remaining spin energy flow, it gives rise to an optical torque. The resulting change in the optical force is detailed for different experimentally relevant configurations, and we show in particular how this change is critical when surface plasmon modes are involved.
Nano Letters | 2013
Aurélien Cuche; Antoine Canaguier-Durand; E. Devaux; James A. Hutchison; Cyriaque Genet; Thomas W. Ebbesen
We exploit plasmonic and thermo-hydrodynamical forces to sort gold nanoparticles in a microfluidic environment. In the appropriate regime, the experimental data extracted from a Brownian statistical analysis of the kinetic motions are in good agreement with Mie-type theoretical evaluations of the optical forces acting on the nanoparticles in the plasmonic near field. This analysis enables us to demonstrate the importance of thermal and hydrodynamical effects in a sorting perspective.
Physical Review A | 2014
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Cyriaque Genet
We evaluate optical forces and torques induced by a surface plasmon to a sphere of arbitrary size, i.e. beyond the point-like dipolar limit. Through a multipolar decomposition of the plasmonic field, we demonstrate that the induced torque is purely transverse to the plasmon propagation direction. Our approach removes the inherent ambiguities of the dipolar regime with respect to rotations and emphasizes the crucial role played by dissipation in the onset of the plasmonic torque. We also give realistic estimates of such plasmon-induced spinning of gold spheres immersed in water or air.
Physical Review A | 2010
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Paulo A. Maia Neto; Astrid Lambrecht; Serge Reynaud
We compute the Casimir interaction between a plane and a sphere, the configuration employed in the most precise experiments. The scattering formula is developed by taking a suitably chosen plane-wave and multipole basis and is valid for arbitrary values of the sphere radius, interplate distance, temperature, and arbitrary dielectric functions for both sphere and plate. Our analytical and numerical results for metallic surfaces show a nontrivial interplay between the effects of curvature, temperature, finite conductivity, and dissipation.
Physical Review A | 2015
Antoine Canaguier-Durand; Cyriaque Genet
We analyze how chirality can generate pulling optical forces and left-handed torques by cross-coupling linear-to-angular momenta between the light field and the chiral object. In the dipolar regime, we reveal that such effects can emerge from a competition between non-chiral and chiral contributions to dissipative optical forces and torques, a competition balanced by the strength of chirality of the object. We extend the analysis to large chiral spheres where the interplay between chirality and multipolar resonances can give rise to a break of symmetry that flips the signs of both optical forces and torques.