Julien Proust
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Julien Proust.
ACS Nano | 2016
Julien Proust; Frédéric Bedu; Bruno Gallas; Igor Ozerov; Nicolas Bonod
The photonic resonances hosted by nanostructures provide vivid colors that can be used as color filters instead of organic colors and pigments in photodetectors and printing technology. Metallic nanostructures have been widely studied due to their ability to sustain surface plasmons that resonantly interact with light. Most of the metallic nanoparticles behave as point-like electric multipoles. However, the needs of an another degree of freedom to tune the color of the photonic nanostructure together with the use of a reliable and cost-effective material are growing. Here, we report a technique to imprint colored images based on silicon nanoparticles that host low-order electric and magnetic Mie resonances. The interplay between the electric and magnetic resonances leads to a large palette of colors. This all-dielectric fabrication technique offers the advantage to use cost-effective, reliable, and sustainable materials to provide vivid color spanning the whole visible spectrum. The interest and potential of this all-dielectric printing technique are highlighted by reproducing at a micrometer scale a Mondrian painting.
Optical Materials Express | 2013
Jerome Martin; Julien Proust; Davy Gérard; Jérôme Plain
We report on a straightforward preparation method to obtain a dense layer of quasi-spherical aluminum nanoparticles over a large area. The method is based on rapid thermal annealing of a thin aluminum film deposited on a super-repellent substrate. Diameters ranging from 2 to 15 nm are obtained by varying the film thickness. Aluminum nanoparticles exhibit well-defined localized surface plasmon resonances in the ultraviolet range as revealed by extinction measurements and confirmed by Mie theory.
Nano Letters | 2016
Raju Regmi; Johann Berthelot; Pamina M. Winkler; Mathieu Mivelle; Julien Proust; Frédéric Bedu; Igor Ozerov; Julien Lumeau; Hervé Rigneault; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo; Sébastien Bidault; Jérôme Wenger; Nicolas Bonod
Plasmonic antennas have a profound impact on nanophotonics as they provide efficient means to manipulate light and enhance light-matter interactions at the nanoscale. However, the large absorption losses found in metals can severely limit the plasmonic applications in the visible spectral range. Here, we demonstrate the effectiveness of an alternative approach using all-dielectric nanoantennas based on silicon dimers to enhance the fluorescence detection of single molecules. The silicon antenna design is optimized to confine the near-field intensity in the 20 nm nanogap and reach a 270-fold fluorescence enhancement in a nanoscale volume of λ(3)/1800 with dielectric materials only. Our conclusions are assessed by combining polarization resolved optical spectroscopy of individual antennas, scanning electron microscopy, numerical simulations, fluorescence lifetime measurements, fluorescence burst analysis, and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. This work demonstrates that all-silicon nanoantennas are a valid alternative to plasmonic devices for enhanced single molecule fluorescence sensing, with the additional key advantages of reduced nonradiative quenching, negligible heat generation, cost-efficiency, and complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) compatibility.
Nano Letters | 2014
Jerome Martin; Mathieu Kociak; Zackaria Mahfoud; Julien Proust; Davy Gérard; Jérôme Plain
We report on the high resolution imaging of multipolar plasmonic resonances in aluminum nanoantennas using electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS). Plasmonic resonances ranging from near-infrared to ultraviolet (UV) are measured. The spatial distributions of the multipolar resonant modes are mapped and their energy dispersion is retrieved. The losses in the aluminum antennas are studied through the full width at half-maximum of the resonances, unveiling the weight of both interband and radiative damping mechanisms of the different multipolar resonances. In the blue-UV spectral range, high order resonant modes present a quality factor up to 8, two times higher than low order resonant modes at the same energy. This study demonstrates that near-infrared to ultraviolet tunable multipolar plasmonic resonances in aluminum nanoantennas with relatively high quality factors can be engineered. Aluminum nanoantennas are thus an appealing alternative to gold or silver ones in the visible and can be efficiently used for UV plasmonics.
Optics Letters | 2012
Jerome Martin; Julien Proust; Davy Gérard; Jean-Louis Bijeon; Jérôme Plain
We show both numerically and experimentally that intense, narrow, and low-divergence beams of light are produced at the apex of dielectric pyramid-shaped microtips. These beams exhibit a Bessel transverse profile but are narrower than the usual Bessel beam, allowing for a significant enhancement of the light intensity inside the beam. They are generated by axicon-like structures with submicrometric height imprinted in glass by combining optical lithography and chemical etching. The resulting beams are experimentally imaged using fluorescence microscopy, in remarkable agreement with numerical computations.
Physical review applied | 2016
Dorian Bouchet; Mathieu Mivelle; Julien Proust; Bruno Gallas; Igor Ozerov; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo; Angelo Gulinatti; Ivan Rech; Yannick De Wilde; Nicolas Bonod; Valentina Krachmalnicoff; Sébastien Bidault
Substituting noble metals for high-index dielectrics has recently been proposed as an alternative strategy in nanophotonics to design broadband optical resonators and circumvent the ohmic losses of plasmonic materials. In this report, we demonstrate that subwavelength silicon nanoantennas can manipulate the photon emission dynamics of fluorescent molecules. In practice, it is showed that dielectric nanoantennas can both increase and decrease the local density of optical states (LDOS) at room temperature, a process that is inaccessible with noble metals at the nanoscale. Using scanning probe microscopy, we analyze quantitatively, in three dimensions, the near-field interaction between a 100 nm fluorescent nanosphere and silicon nanoantennas with diameters ranging between 170 nm and 250 nm. Associated to numerical simulations, these measurements indicate increased or decreased total spontaneous decay rates by up to 15 % and a gain in the collection efficiency of emitted photons by up to 85 %. Our study demonstrates the potential of silicon-based nanoantennas for the low-loss manipulation of solid-state emitters at the nanoscale and at room temperature.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Julien Proust; Anne-Laure Fehrembach; Frédéric Bedu; Igor Ozerov; Nicolas Bonod
Light reflection occuring at the surface of silicon wafers is drastically diminished by etching square pillars of height 110 nm and width 140 nm separated by a 100 nm gap distance in a square lattice. The design of the nanostructure is optimized to widen the spectral tolerance of the antireflective coatings over the visible spectrum for both fundamental polarizations. Angle and polarized resolved optical measurements report a light reflection remaining under 5% when averaged in the visible spectrum for both polarizations in a wide angular range. Light reflection remains almost insensitive to the light polarization even in oblique incidence.
Applied Physics Letters | 2011
Thomas Lerond; Julien Proust; Hélène Yockell-Lelièvre; Davy Gérard; Jérôme Plain
Metallic nanoparticles are self-assembled into plasmonic nanorings. The self-assembly is evaporation-induced and is driven using a template of dielectric microspheres. We obtain well-ordered arrays of metallic nanorings over large areas. The inner and outer diameters of the rings, as well as the pitch of the array, are fully controllable. The optical resonances supported by the plasmonic rings are then characterized using extinction spectroscopy. Our approach opens a simple and inexpensive road to create plasmonic structures that can find applications as metamaterials or substrates for enhanced spectroscopies.
Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2013
Alexandre Plaud; A. Sarrazin; Jérémie Béal; Julien Proust; P. Royer; Jean-Louis Bijeon; Jérôme Plain; Pierre-Michel Adam; Thomas Maurer
Here we present an original process combining top-down and bottom-up approaches by annealing a thin gold film evaporated onto a hole template made by etching a PS–PMMA copolymer film. Such process allows a better control of the gold nanoparticle size distribution which provides a sharper localized surface plasmon resonance. This makes such route appealing for sensing applications since the figure of merit of the Au nanoparticles obtained after thermal evaporation is more than doubled. Such process could besides allow tuning the localized surface plasmon resonance by using copolymers with various molecular weights and thus be attractive for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy.
Optics Letters | 2011
Xinhua Zeng; Safi Jradi; Julien Proust; Renaud Bachelot; Zhenquan Zhang; P. Royer; Jérôme Plain
We explore a rapid route for fabricating silver nanoparticles (NPs) at the end of an optical fiber. The size and number of silver NPs can be controlled by varying the exposure doses. The effect of the refractive index of different solvents on the extinction spectra have been studied as a proof of concept of a fiber integrated plasmon-based sensor.