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Dive into the research topics where Juan M. Merlo is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan M. Merlo.


Nanophotonics | 2014

Optical and electrical mappings of surface plasmon cavity modes

Fan Ye; Juan M. Merlo; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton

Abstract Plasmonics is a rapidly expanding field, founded in physics but now with a growing number of applications in biology (biosensing), nanophotonics, photovoltaics, optical engineering and advanced information technology. Appearing as charge density oscillations along a metal surface, excited by electromagnetic radiation (e.g., light), plasmons can propagate as surface plasmon polaritons, or can be confined as standing waves along an appropriately-prepared surface. Here, we review the latter manifestation, both their origins and the manners in which they are detected, the latter dominated by near field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM/SNOM). We include discussion of the “plasmonic halo” effect recently observed by the authors, wherein cavity-confined plasmons are able to modulate optical transmission through step-gap nanostructures, yielding a novel form of color (wavelength) selection.


Optics Express | 2015

Hot electron plasmon-protected solar cell.

Jiantao Kong; Aaron H. Rose; Chaobin Yang; Xueyuan Wu; Juan M. Merlo; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton; Krzysztof Kempa

A solar cell based on a hot electron plasmon protection effect is proposed and made plausible by simulations, non-local modeling of the response, and quantum mechanical calculations. In this cell, a thin-film, plasmonic metamaterial structure acts as both an efficient photon absorber in the visible frequency range and a plasmonic resonator in the IR range, the latter of which absorbs and protects against phonon emission the free energy of the hot electrons in an adjacent semiconductor junction. We show that in this structure, electron-plasmon scattering is much more efficient than electron-phonon scattering in cooling-off hot electrons, and the plasmon-stored energy is recoverable as an additional cell voltage. The proposed structure could become a prototype of a new generation of high efficiency solar cells.


Optics Express | 2014

Near-field observation of light propagation in nanocoax waveguides

Juan M. Merlo; Fan Ye; Binod Rizal; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton

We report the observation of propagating modes of visible and near infrared light in nanoscale coaxial (metal-dielectric-metal) structures, using near-field scanning optical microscopy. Together with numerical calculations, we show that the propagated modes have different nature depending on the excitation wavelength, i.e., plasmonic TE11 and TE21 modes in the near infrared and photonic TE31, TE41 and TM11 modes in the visible. Far field transmission out of the nanocoaxes is dominated by the superposition of Fabry-Perot cavity modes resonating in the structures, consistent with theory. Such coaxial optical waveguides may be useful for future nanoscale photonic systems.


Optics Express | 2014

Leakage radiation microscope for observation of non-transparent samples

Juan M. Merlo; Fan Ye; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton

We describe a leakage radiation microscope technique that can be used to extend the leakage radiation microscopy to optically non-transparent samples. In particular, two experiments are presented, first to demonstrate that acquired images with our configuration correspond to the leakage radiation phenomenon and second, to show possible applications by directly imaging a plasmonic structure that previously could only be imaged with a near-field scanning optical microscope. It is shown that the measured surface plasmon wavelength and propagation length agree with theoretically-calculated values. This configuration opens the possibility to study important effects where samples are optically non-transparent, as in plasmonic cavities and single hole plasmonic excitation, without the use of time-consuming near-field scanning optical microscopy.


Optics Express | 2014

Leakage radiation microscope for observation of non-transparent samples: erratum

Juan M. Merlo; Fan Ye; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton

This erratum provides the missing Acknowledgments section from paper [Opt. Express 19, 22895 (2014)].


Scientific Reports | 2016

Wireless communication system via nanoscale plasmonic antennas

Juan M. Merlo; Nathan T. Nesbitt; Yitzi M. Calm; Aaron H. Rose; Luke D’Imperio; Chaobin Yang; Jeffrey R. Naughton; Michael J. Burns; Krzysztof Kempa; Michael J. Naughton


Analyst | 2015

Nanocoaxes for optical and electronic devices.

Binod Rizal; Juan M. Merlo; Michael J. Burns; Thomas C. Chiles; Michael J. Naughton


Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2018

All‐Solution‐Processed, Scalable, Self‐Cracking Ag Network Transparent Conductor

Chaobin Yang; Juan M. Merlo; Jiantao Kong; Zhike Xian; Bing Han; Guofu Zhou; Jinwei Gao; Michael J. Burns; Krzysztof Kempa; Michael J. Naughton


Flexible and Printed Electronics | 2018

Arrays of electrically-addressable, optically-transmitting 3D nanostructures on free-standing, flexible polymer films

L A D’Imperio; A F McCrossan; Jeffrey R. Naughton; Juan M. Merlo; Yitzi M. Calm; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

All-optical binary switch based on photonic topological states

Juan M. Merlo; Michael J. Burns; Michael J. Naughton

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