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Dive into the research topics where Heiko Kollmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Heiko Kollmann.


Nano Letters | 2014

Toward Plasmonics with Nanometer Precision: Nonlinear Optics of Helium-Ion Milled Gold Nanoantennas

Heiko Kollmann; Xianji Piao; Martin Esmann; Simon F. Becker; Dongchao Hou; Chuong Huynh; Lars-Oliver Kautschor; Guido Bösker; Henning Vieker; André Beyer; Armin Gölzhäuser; Namkyoo Park; Ralf Vogelgesang; Martin Silies; Christoph Lienau

Plasmonic nanoantennas are versatile tools for coherently controlling and directing light on the nanoscale. For these antennas, current fabrication techniques such as electron beam lithography (EBL) or focused ion beam (FIB) milling with Ga(+)-ions routinely achieve feature sizes in the 10 nm range. However, they suffer increasingly from inherent limitations when a precision of single nanometers down to atomic length scales is required, where exciting quantum mechanical effects are expected to affect the nanoantenna optics. Here, we demonstrate that a combined approach of Ga(+)-FIB and milling-based He(+)-ion lithography (HIL) for the fabrication of nanoantennas offers to readily overcome some of these limitations. Gold bowtie antennas with 6 nm gap size were fabricated with single-nanometer accuracy and high reproducibility. Using third harmonic (TH) spectroscopy, we find a substantial enhancement of the nonlinear emission intensity of single HIL-antennas compared to those produced by state-of-the-art gallium-based milling. Moreover, HIL-antennas show a vastly improved polarization contrast. This superior nonlinear performance of HIL-derived plasmonic structures is an excellent testimonial to the application of He(+)-ion beam milling for ultrahigh precision nanofabrication, which in turn can be viewed as a stepping stone to mastering quantum optical investigations in the near-field.


Light-Science & Applications | 2017

Long-lived electron emission reveals localized plasmon modes in disordered nanosponge antennas

Germann Hergert; Jan Vogelsang; Felix Schwarz; Dong Wang; Heiko Kollmann; Petra Groß; Christoph Lienau; Erich Runge; Peter Schaaf

We report long-lived, highly spatially localized plasmon states on the surface of nanoporous gold nanoparticles—nanosponges—with high excitation efficiency. It is well known that disorder on the nanometer scale, particularly in two-dimensional systems, can lead to plasmon localization and large field enhancements, which can, in turn, be used to enhance nonlinear optical effects and to study and exploit quantum optical processes. Here, we introduce promising, three-dimensional model systems for light capture and plasmon localization as gold nanosponges that are formed by the dewetting of gold/silver bilayers and dealloying. We study light-induced electron emission from single nanosponges, a nonlinear process with exponents of n≈5...7, using ultrashort laser pulse excitation to achieve femtosecond time resolution. The long-lived electron emission process proves, in combination with optical extinction measurements and finite-difference time-domain calculations, the existence of localized modes with lifetimes of more than 20 fs. These electrons couple efficiently to the dipole antenna mode of each individual nanosponge, which in turn couples to the far-field. Thus, individual gold nanosponges are cheap and robust disordered nanoantennas with strong local resonances, and an ensemble of nanosponges constitutes a meta material with a strong polarization independent, nonlinear response over a wide frequency range.


ACS Nano | 2016

Suppression of Radiative Damping and Enhancement of Second Harmonic Generation in Bull’s Eye Nanoresonators

Jue-Min Yi; Vladimir Smirnov; Xianji Piao; Jiho Hong; Heiko Kollmann; Martin Silies; Wei Wang; Petra Groß; Ralf Vogelgesang; Namkyoo Park; Christoph Lienau

We report a drastic increase of the damping time of plasmonic eigenmodes in resonant bulls eye (BE) nanoresonators to more than 35 fs. This is achieved by tailoring the groove depth of the resonator and by coupling the confined plasmonic field in the aperture to an extended resonator mode such that spatial coherence is preserved over distances of more than 10 μm. Experimentally, this is demonstrated by probing the plasmon dynamics at the field level using broadband spectral interferometry. The nanoresonator allows us to efficiently concentrate the incident field inside the central aperture of the BE and to tailor its local optical nonlinearity by varying the aperture geometry. By replacing the central circular hole with an annular ring structure, we obtain 50-times higher second harmonic generation efficiency, allowing us to demonstrate the efficient concentration of long-lived plasmonic modes inside nanoapertures by interferometric frequency-resolved autocorrelation. Such a light concentration in a nanoresonator with high quality factor has high potential for sensing and coherent control of light-matter interactions on the nanoscale.


Nanophotonics | 2018

Fourier-transform spatial modulation spectroscopy of single gold nanorods

Heiko Kollmann; Martin Esmann; Julia Witt; Aleksandra Markovic; Vladimir Smirnov; Gunther Wittstock; Martin Silies; Christoph Lienau

Abstract Sensing the scattered fields of single metallic nanostructures is a crucial step towards the applications of isolated plasmonic antennas, such as for the sensing of single molecules or nanoparticles. In the past, both near- and far-field spectroscopy methods have been applied to monitor single plasmonic resonances. So far, however, these spectral-domain techniques do not yet provide the femtosecond time resolution that is needed to probe the dynamics of plasmonic fields in the time domain. Here, we introduce a time-domain technique that combines broadband Fourier-transform spectroscopy and spatial modulation spectroscopy (FT-SMS) to quantitatively measure the extinction spectra of the isolated gold nanorods with a nominal footprint of 41×10 nm2. Using a phase-stable pulse pair for excitation, the technique is capable of rejecting off-resonant stray fields and providing absolute measurements of the extinction cross section. Our results indicate that the method is well suited for measuring the optical response of strongly coupled hybrid systems with high signal-to-noise ratio. It may form the basis for new approaches towards time-domain spectroscopy of single nanoantennas with few-cycle time resolution.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Ultrafast third-harmonic spectroscopy of single nanoantennas fabricated using helium-ion beam lithography

Heiko Kollmann; Martin Esmann; Simon F. Becker; Xianji Piao; Chuong Huynh; L.-O. Kautschor; G. Bösker; Henning Vieker; André Beyer; Armin Gölzhäuser; Namkyoo Park; Martin Silies; Christoph Lienau

Metallic nanoantennas are able to spatially localize far-field electromagnetic waves on a few nanometer length scale in the form of surface plasmon excitations 1-3. Standard tools for fabricating bowtie and rod antennas with sub-20 nm feature sizes are Electron Beam Lithography or Ga-based Focused Ion Beam (FIB) Milling. These structures, however, often suffer from surface roughness and hence show only a limited optical polarization contrast and therefore a limited electric field localization. Here, we combine Ga- and He-ion based milling (HIM) for the fabrication of gold bowtie and rod antennas with gap sizes of less than 6 nm combined with a high aspect ratio. Using polarization-sensitive Third-Harmonic (TH) spectroscopy, we compare the nonlinear optical properties of single HIM-antennas with sub-6-nm gaps with those produced by standard Ga-based FIB. We find a pronounced enhancement of the total TH intensity of more than three in comparison to Ga-FIB antennas and a highly improved polarization contrast of the TH intensity of 250:1 for Heion produced antennas 4. These findings combined with Finite-Element Method calculations demonstrate a field enhancement of up to one hundred in the few-nanometer gap of the antenna. This makes He-ion beam milling a highly attractive and promising new tool for the fabrication of plasmonic nanoantennas with few-nanometer feature sizes.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2015

Gap mode formation in metallic, nanofocusing SNOM tapers for high spatial resolution broadband spectroscopy

Martin Esmann; Simon F. Becker; Kyungwan Yoo; Heiko Kollmann; Petra Groß; Ralf Vogelgesang; Namkyoo Park; Christoph Lienau

Nanofocusing of surface plasmon polaritons enables broadband elastic scattering spectroscopy on individual nanoantennas without any signal demodulation. Clear experimental signatures of tip-sample gap mode formation hint at a potential increase in lateral resolution to single nanometers.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Strong Field Acceleration and Steering of Ultrafast Electron Pulses from a Sharp Metallic Nanotip

Doo Jae Park; Bjoern Piglosiewicz; Slawa Schmidt; Heiko Kollmann; Manfred Mascheck; Christoph Lienau


Annalen der Physik | 2013

Characterizing the optical near‐field in the vicinity of a sharp metallic nanoprobe by angle‐resolved electron kinetic energy spectroscopy

Doo Jae Park; Björn Piglosiewicz; Slawa Schmidt; Heiko Kollmann; Manfred Mascheck; Petra Groß; Christoph Lienau


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Probing the Ca2+ Switch of the Neuronal Ca2+ Sensor GCAP2 by Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy

Heiko Kollmann; Simon F. Becker; Javid Shirdel; Alexander Scholten; Anna Ostendorp; Christoph Lienau; Karl-Wilhelm Koch


Crystal Growth & Design | 2017

Spotlight on Excitonic Coupling in Polymorphic and Textured Anilino Squaraine Thin Films

Frank Balzer; Heiko Kollmann; Matthias Schulz; Gregor Schnakenburg; Arne Lützen; Marc Schmidtmann; Christoph Lienau; Martin Silies; Manuela Schiek

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Petra Groß

University of Münster

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Namkyoo Park

Seoul National University

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Xianji Piao

Seoul National University

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