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Dive into the research topics where Bert Hecht is active.

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Featured researches published by Bert Hecht.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2012

Nanoantennas for visible and infrared radiation

Paolo Biagioni; Jer-Shing Huang; Bert Hecht

Nanoantennas for visible and infrared radiation can strongly enhance the interaction of light with nanoscale matter by their ability to efficiently link propagating and spatially localized optical fields. This ability unlocks an enormous potential for applications ranging from nanoscale optical microscopy and spectroscopy over solar energy conversion, integrated optical nanocircuitry, opto-electronics and density-of-states engineering to ultra-sensing as well as enhancement of optical nonlinearities. Here we review the current understanding of metallic optical antennas based on the background of both well-developed radiowave antenna engineering and plasmonics. In particular, we discuss the role of plasmonic resonances on the performance of nanoantennas and address the influence of geometrical parameters imposed by nanofabrication. Finally, we give a brief account of the current status of the field and the major established and emerging lines of investigation in this vivid area of research.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2000

Scanning near-field optical microscopy with aperture probes: Fundamentals and applications

Bert Hecht; Beate Sick; Urs P. Wild; Volker Deckert; Renato Zenobi; Olivier J. F. Martin; Dieter W. Pohl

In this review we describe fundamentals of scanning near-field optical microscopy with aperture probes. After the discussion of instrumentation and probe fabrication, aspects of light propagation in metal-coated, tapered optical fibers are considered. This includes transmission properties and field distributions in the vicinity of subwavelength apertures. Furthermore, the near-field optical image formation mechanism is analyzed with special emphasis on potential sources of artifacts. To underline the prospects of the technique, selected applications including amplitude and phase contrast imaging, fluorescence imaging, and Raman spectroscopy, as well as near-field optical desorption, are presented. These examples demonstrate that scanning near-field optical microscopy is no longer an exotic method but has matured into a valuable tool.


Journal of Applied Physics | 1997

Facts and artifacts in near-field optical microscopy

Bert Hecht; H. Bielefeldt; Y. Inouye; Dieter W. Pohl; Lukas Novotny

Near-field optical (NFO) microscopes with an auxiliary gap width regulation (shear force, tunneling) may produce images that represent the path of the probe rather than optical properties of the sample. Experimental and theoretical evidence leads us to the conclusion that many NFO results reported in the past might have been affected or even dominated by the resulting artifact. The specifications derived from such results for the different types of NFO microscopes used therefore warrant reexamination. We show that the resolving power of aperture NFO microscopes, 30–50 nm, is of genuine NFO origin but can be heavily obscured by the artifact.


Applied Physics Letters | 1999

High-quality near-field optical probes by tube etching

Raoul M. Stöckle; Christian Fokas; Volker Deckert; Renato Zenobi; Beate Sick; Bert Hecht; Urs P. Wild

A method called tube etching for the fabrication of near-field optical probes is presented. Tip formation occurs inside a cylindrical cavity formed by the polymer coating of an optical fiber which is not stripped away prior to etching in hydrofluoric acid. The influence of temperature, etchant concentration, and fiber type on the tip quality is studied. A tip formation mechanism for the given geometry is proposed. The procedure overcomes drawbacks of the conventional etching techniques while still producing large cone angles: (i) tips with reproducible shapes are formed in a high yield, (ii) the surface roughness on the taper is drastically reduced, and (iii) the tip quality is insensitive to vibrations and temperature fluctuations during the etching process. After aluminum coating, optical probes with well-defined apertures are obtained. Due to the smooth glass surface the aluminum coating is virtually free of pinholes.


Nature Communications | 2010

Atomically flat single-crystalline gold nanostructures for plasmonic nanocircuitry

Jer-Shing Huang; Victor Callegari; Peter Geisler; Christoph Brüning; Johannes Kern; Jord Prangsma; Xiaofei Wu; Thorsten Feichtner; Johannes Ziegler; Pia Weinmann; M. Kamp; A. Forchel; Paolo Biagioni; Urs Sennhauser; Bert Hecht

Deep subwavelength integration of high-definition plasmonic nanostructures is of key importance in the development of future optical nanocircuitry for high-speed communication, quantum computation and lab-on-a-chip applications. To date, the experimental realization of proposed extended plasmonic networks consisting of multiple functional elements remains challenging, mainly because of the multi-crystallinity of commonly used thermally evaporated gold layers. This can produce structural imperfections in individual circuit elements that drastically reduce the yield of functional integrated nanocircuits. In this paper we demonstrate the use of large (>100 μm(2)) but thin (<80 nm) chemically grown single-crystalline gold flakes that, after immobilization, serve as an ideal basis for focused ion beam milling and other top-down nanofabrication techniques on any desired substrate. Using this methodology we obtain high-definition ultrasmooth gold nanostructures with superior optical properties and reproducible nano-sized features over micrometre-length scales. Our approach provides a possible solution to overcome the current fabrication bottleneck and realize high-definition plasmonic nanocircuitry.


Optics Letters | 1995

Scanning near-field optical probe with ultrasmall spot size

Lukas Novotny; Dieter W. Pohl; Bert Hecht

A novel light-emitting probe for scanning near-field optical microscopy is investigated theoretically. The three-dimensional vectorial Helmholtz equation is solved for the new probe geometry by using the multiple multipole method. The novel probe consists of a dielectric tip that is entirely metal coated. It provides a single near-field spot that can be smaller than 20 nm (FWHM). The dependence on tip radius, taper angle, and metal thickness in front of the tip is investigated for the power transmission through the probe as well as for the spot size.


Nano Letters | 2009

Impedance Matching and Emission Properties of Nanoantennas in an Optical Nanocircuit

Jer-Shing Huang; Thorsten Feichtner; Paolo Biagioni; Bert Hecht

An experimentally realizable prototype optical nanocircuit consisting of a receiving and an emitting nanoantenna connected by a two-wire optical transmission line is studied using finite-difference time- and frequency-domain simulations. To optimize the coupling between optical nanocircuit elements we apply impedance matching concepts in analogy to radio frequency technology. We show that the degree of impedance matching, and in particular the impedance of the emitting nanoantenna, can be inferred from the experimentally accessible standing wave pattern on the transmission line. We demonstrate the possibility of matching the nanoantenna impedance to the transmission line by variations of the antenna length and width realizable by modern microfabrication techniques. The radiation efficiency of the emitting antenna also depends on its geometry but is independent of the degree of impedance matching. The case study presented here provides the basis for experimental realizations of general optical nanocircuits based on readily available gold nanostructures and a large variety of derived novel devices.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Mode matching in multiresonant plasmonic nanoantennas for enhanced second harmonic generation

Michele Celebrano; Xiaofei Wu; Milena Baselli; Swen Großmann; Paolo Biagioni; A. Locatelli; Costantino De Angelis; Giulio Cerullo; Roberto Osellame; Bert Hecht; L. Duò; Franco Ciccacci; Marco Finazzi

Boosting nonlinear frequency conversion in extremely confined volumes remains a challenge in nano-optics research, but can enable applications in nanomedicine, photocatalysis and background-free biosensing. To obtain brighter nonlinear nanoscale sources, approaches that enhance the electromagnetic field intensity and counter the lack of phase matching in nanoplasmonic systems are often employed. However, the high degree of symmetry in the crystalline structure of plasmonic materials (metals in particular) and in nanoantenna designs strongly quenches second harmonic generation. Here, we describe doubly-resonant single-crystalline gold nanostructures with no axial symmetry displaying spatial mode overlap at both the excitation and second harmonic wavelengths. The combination of these features allows the attainment of a nonlinear coefficient for second harmonic generation of ∼5 × 10(-10) W(-1), enabling a second harmonic photon yield higher than 3 × 10(6) photons per second. Theoretical estimations point toward the use of our nonlinear plasmonic nanoantennas as efficient platforms for label-free molecular sensing.


Nanotechnology | 2007

Bow-tie optical antenna probes for single-emitter scanning near-field optical microscopy

J. N. Farahani; Hans-Jürgen Eisler; Dieter W. Pohl; Michaël Pavius; Philippe Flückiger; Philippe Gasser; Bert Hecht

A method for the fabrication of bow-tie optical antennas at the apex of pyramidal Si3N4 atomic force microscopy tips is described. We demonstrate that these novel optical probes are capable of sub-wavelength imaging of single quantum dots at room temperature. The enhanced and confined optical near-field at the antenna feed gap leads to locally enhanced photoluminescence (PL) of single quantum dots. Photoluminescence quenching due to the proximity of metal is found to be insignificant. The method holds promise for single quantum emitter imaging and spectroscopy at spatial resolution limited by the engineered antenna gap width exclusively.


Journal of Applied Physics | 1997

Interference of locally excited surface plasmons

Lukas Novotny; Bert Hecht; Dieter W. Pohl

Surface plasmon interactions on a finite silver layer are theoretically investigated using a coupled dipole formalism. The studied system consists of several protruding particles located on the surface of the layer that are scanned with an optical probe. An optical scan-image of the silver surface is obtained by assigning the recorded far-field radiation to the momentary position of the optical probe. Both, probe and protrusions are considered as single dipolar particles. Interferences of the locally excited surface plasmons can be recorded by detecting the radiation emitted into the lower half-space at angles beyond the critical angle of total internal reflection (forbidden light). The resulting scan images show excellent agreement with recent experimental measurements. The theory of the coupled dipole formalism using Green’s functions of a layered reference system is outlined and electromagnetic properties of surface plasmons are discussed.

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Xiaofei Wu

University of Bayreuth

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Urs P. Wild

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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M. Kamp

University of Würzburg

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Tobias Brixner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jer-Shing Huang

National Tsing Hua University

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