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Dive into the research topics where John Henson is active.

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Featured researches published by John Henson.


Optics Express | 2010

Enhanced near-green light emission from InGaN quantum wells by use of tunable plasmonic resonances in silver nanoparticle arrays

John Henson; E. Dimakis; Jeff DiMaria; Rui Li; Salvatore Minissale; Luca Dal Negro; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

Two-dimensional arrays of silver nanocylinders fabricated by electron-beam lithography are used to demonstrate plasmon-enhanced near-green light emission from nitride semiconductor quantum wells. Several arrays with different nanoparticle dimensions are employed, designed to yield collective plasmonic resonances in the spectral vicinity of the emission wavelength and at the same time to provide efficient far-field scattering of the emitted surface plasmons. Large enhancements in peak photoluminescence intensity (up to a factor of over 3) are measured, accompanied by a substantial reduction in recombination lifetime indicative of increased internal quantum efficiency. Furthermore, the enhancement factors are found to exhibit a strong dependence on the nanoparticle dimensions, underscoring the importance of geometrical tuning for this application.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2009

Influence of nanoparticle height on plasmonic resonance wavelength and electromagnetic field enhancement in two-dimensional arrays

John Henson; Jeff DiMaria; Roberto Paiella

A detailed experimental and theoretical study of the plasmonic properties of silver nanoparticle arrays as a function of nanoparticle height is presented. Specifically, several square periodic arrays have been fabricated by electron beam lithography and characterized via transmission spectroscopy measurements. The same arrays have also been numerically investigated via finite-difference time-domain calculations of their scattering and absorption cross sections and steady-state field intensity distributions. The results of this study show that the collective plasmonic resonances of these arrays can be effectively blueshifted by increasing the nanoparticle height, while at the same time maximizing the average field enhancement in the substrate and maintaining small absorption losses. This approach can therefore be used to extend the spectral reach of lithographically defined metallic nanoparticle arrays for practical applications such as light-emission efficiency enhancement.


Optics Letters | 2012

Plasmon-enhanced light emission based on lattice resonances of silver nanocylinder arrays

John Henson; Jeff DiMaria; E. Dimakis; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

Diffractive arrays of silver nanocylinders are used to increase the radiative efficiency of InGaN/GaN quantum wells emitting at near-green wavelengths. Large enhancements in luminescence intensity (up to a factor of nearly 5) are measured when the array period exceeds the emission wavelength in the semiconductor material. The experimental results and related numerical simulations indicate that the underlying mechanism is a strong resonant coupling between the light-emitting excitons in the quantum wells and the plasmonic lattice resonances of the arrays. These excitations are particularly well suited to light-emission-efficiency enhancement, compared to localized surface plasmon resonances at similar wavelengths, due to their larger scattering efficiency and larger spatial extension across the sample area.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Plasmon enhanced light emission from InGaN quantum wells via coupling to chemically synthesized silver nanoparticles

John Henson; John C. Heckel; E. Dimakis; Josh Abell; Anirban Bhattacharyya; George Chumanov; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

Chemically synthesized single-crystal silver nanoparticles are used to demonstrate plasmon enhanced visible light emission from nitride semiconductor quantum wells. For ease of assembly and testing, the nanoparticles are embedded onto the surface of flexible resin films, which are then simply adhered on top of the light emitting samples. Large enhancements in photoluminescence efficiency are correspondingly measured at emission wavelengths near the nanoparticle plasmonic resonance. At the same time, when samples emitting at a sufficiently far detuned wavelength are used, the measured efficiency is not affected by the nanoparticles, which confirms the plasmonic origin of the observed enhancement.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2008

Controlling the recombination rate of semiconductor active layers via coupling to dispersion-engineered surface plasmons

John Henson; Anirban Bhattacharyya; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

The coupling between excited electron-hole pairs in semiconductor active layers and surface plasmon polaritons in metallo-dielectric stacks is investigated. These structures can be used to engineer the surface-plasmon dispersion properties so as to introduce tunable singularities in the photonic density of modes, and hence in the recombination rate of nearby active media. A detailed theoretical study of this effect is presented together with the experimental demonstration of geometrically tunable increased recombination in GaN/AlGaN quantum wells via near-UV photoluminescence measurements. If combined with a suitable geometry to efficiently scatter the emitted surface waves into radiation, this approach can be used for light-emission efficiency enhancement at tunable wavelengths.


conference on lasers and electro-optics | 2011

Diffraction-coupled plasmon-enhanced light emission from InGaN/GaN quantum wells

John Henson; E. Dimakis; Jeff DiMaria; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

Plasmon-enhanced near-green light emission from InGaN/GaN quantum wells is demonstrated using periodic arrays of silver nanoparticles. Particularly large (nearly fivefold) enhancements are obtained when the array dimensions are near the onset of the diffractive regime.


Frontiers in Optics | 2009

Tunable Plasmonic Resonances in Two-Dimensional Arrays via Nanoparticle Height Control

John Henson; Jeff DiMaria; Roberto Paiella

Experimental and theoretical investigations show that the collective plasmonic resonances of two-dimensional silver nanoparticle arrays can be effectively blue-shifted by increasing the particle height while still maintaining large field enhancements and small absorption losses.


Frontiers in Optics | 2009

Plasmon-Enhanced Light Emission from InGaN Quantum Wells Using Chemically Synthesized Silver Nanoparticles

John Henson; John C. Heckel; E. Dimakis; Josh Abell; George Chumanov; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella

A simple technique to couple solid-state light-emitting materials to plasmonic nanostructures is demonstrated, based on chemically synthesized silver nanoparticles embedded in flexible resin films. Substantial photoluminescence efficiency enhancements are correspondingly obtained from InGaN quantum wells.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2012

Coupled metallic thin-film/nanoparticle-array systems for far-field engineering of quantum-well luminescence

Jeffrey DiMaria; E. Dimakis; John Henson; Theodore D. Moustakas; Roberto Paiella


Meeting Abstracts | 2011

Plasmon-Enhanced Near-Green Light Emission from InGaN/GaN Quantum Wells

Roberto Paiella; John Henson; Jeff DiMaria; E. Dimakis; Rui Li; Salvatore Minissale; Luca Dal Negro; Theodore D. Moustakas

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