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Dive into the research topics where Kevin M. McPeak is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin M. McPeak.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2012

Engineering metallic nanostructures for plasmonics and nanophotonics

Nathan C. Lindquist; Prashant Nagpal; Kevin M. McPeak; David J. Norris; Sang Hyun Oh

Metallic nanostructures now play an important role in many applications. In particular, for the emerging fields of plasmonics and nanophotonics, the ability to engineer metals on nanometric scales allows the development of new devices and the study of exciting physics. This review focuses on top-down nanofabrication techniques for engineering metallic nanostructures, along with computational and experimental characterization techniques. A variety of current and emerging applications are also covered.


ACS Photonics | 2015

Plasmonic Films Can Easily Be Better: Rules and Recipes

Kevin M. McPeak; Sriharsha V. Jayanti; Stephan J. P. Kress; Stefan Meyer; Stelio Iotti; Aurelio Rossinelli; David J. Norris

High-quality materials are critical for advances in plasmonics, especially as researchers now investigate quantum effects at the limit of single surface plasmons or exploit ultraviolet- or CMOS-compatible metals such as aluminum or copper. Unfortunately, due to inexperience with deposition methods, many plasmonics researchers deposit metals under the wrong conditions, severely limiting performance unnecessarily. This is then compounded as others follow their published procedures. In this perspective, we describe simple rules collected from the surface-science literature that allow high-quality plasmonic films of aluminum, copper, gold, and silver to be easily deposited with commonly available equipment (a thermal evaporator). Recipes are also provided so that films with optimal optical properties can be routinely obtained.


Nano Letters | 2015

Wedge Waveguides and Resonators for Quantum Plasmonics

Stephan J. P. Kress; Felipe V. Antolinez; Patrizia Richner; Sriharsha V. Jayanti; David K. Kim; Ferry Prins; Andreas Riedinger; Maximilian Fischer; Stefan Meyer; Kevin M. McPeak; Dimos Poulikakos; David J. Norris

Plasmonic structures can provide deep-subwavelength electromagnetic fields that are useful for enhancing light–matter interactions. However, because these localized modes are also dissipative, structures that offer the best compromise between field confinement and loss have been sought. Metallic wedge waveguides were initially identified as an ideal candidate but have been largely abandoned because to date their experimental performance has been limited. We combine state-of-the-art metallic wedges with integrated reflectors and precisely placed colloidal quantum dots (down to the single-emitter level) and demonstrate quantum-plasmonic waveguides and resonators with performance approaching theoretical limits. By exploiting a nearly 10-fold improvement in wedge-plasmon propagation (19 μm at a vacuum wavelength, λvac, of 630 nm), efficient reflectors (93%), and effective coupling (estimated to be >70%) to highly emissive (∼90%) quantum dots, we obtain Ag plasmonic resonators at visible wavelengths with quality factors approaching 200 (3.3 nm line widths). As our structures offer modal volumes down to ∼0.004λvac3 in an exposed single-mode waveguide–resonator geometry, they provide advantages over both traditional photonic microcavities and localized-plasmonic resonators for enhancing light–matter interactions. Our results confirm the promise of wedges for creating plasmonic devices and for studying coherent quantum-plasmonic effects such as long-distance plasmon-mediated entanglement and strong plasmon–matter coupling.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013

Fabrication of Smooth Patterned Structures of Refractory Metals, Semiconductors, and Oxides via Template Stripping

Jong Hyuk Park; Prashant Nagpal; Kevin M. McPeak; Nathan C. Lindquist; Sang Hyun Oh; David J. Norris

The template-stripping method can yield smooth patterned films without surface contamination. However, the process is typically limited to coinage metals such as silver and gold because other materials cannot be readily stripped from silicon templates due to strong adhesion. Herein, we report a more general template-stripping method that is applicable to a larger variety of materials, including refractory metals, semiconductors, and oxides. To address the adhesion issue, we introduce a thin gold layer between the template and the deposited materials. After peeling off the combined film from the template, the gold layer can be selectively removed via wet etching to reveal a smooth patterned structure of the desired material. Further, we demonstrate template-stripped multilayer structures that have potential applications for photovoltaics and solar absorbers. An entire patterned device, which can include a transparent conductor, semiconductor absorber, and back contact, can be fabricated. Since our approach can also produce many copies of the patterned structure with high fidelity by reusing the template, a low-cost and high-throughput process in micro- and nanofabrication is provided that is useful for electronics, plasmonics, and nanophotonics.


Nano Letters | 2014

Complex chiral colloids and surfaces via high-index off-cut silicon

Kevin M. McPeak; Christian D. van Engers; Mark Blome; Jong Hyuk Park; Sven Burger; M. A. Gosálvez; Ava Faridi; Yasmina Ries; Ayaskanta Sahu; David J. Norris

Silicon wafers are commonly etched in potassium hydroxide solutions to form highly symmetric surface structures. These arise when slow-etching {111} atomic planes are exposed on standard low-index surfaces. However, the ability of nonstandard high-index wafers to provide more complex structures by tilting the {111} planes has not been fully appreciated. We demonstrate the power of this approach by creating chiral surface structures and nanoparticles of a specific handedness from gold. When the nanoparticles are dispersed in liquids, gold colloids exhibiting record molar circular dichroism (>5 × 10(9) M(-1) cm(-1)) at red wavelengths are obtained. The nanoparticles also present chiral pockets for binding.


ACS Photonics | 2016

Optical Chirality Flux as a Useful Far-Field Probe of Chiral Near Fields

Lisa V. Poulikakos; Philipp Gutsche; Kevin M. McPeak; Sven Burger; Jens Niegemann; Christian Hafner; David J. Norris

To optimize the interaction between chiral matter and highly twisted light, quantities that can help characterize chiral electromagnetic fields near nanostructures are needed. Here, by analogy with Poynting’s theorem, we formulate the time-averaged conservation law of optical chirality in lossy dispersive media and identify the optical chirality flux as an ideal far-field observable for characterizing chiral optical near fields. Bounded by the conservation law, we show that it provides precise information, unavailable from circular dichroism spectroscopy, on the magnitude and handedness of highly twisted fields near nanostructures.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Ultraviolet Plasmonic Chirality from Colloidal Aluminum Nanoparticles Exhibiting Charge‐Selective Protein Detection

Kevin M. McPeak; Christian D. van Engers; Sarah Bianchi; Aurelio Rossinelli; Lisa V. Poulikakos; Laetitia Bernard; Sven Herrmann; David K. Kim; Sven Burger; Mark Blome; Sriharsha V. Jayanti; David J. Norris

Chiral aluminum nanoparticles, dispersed in water, are prepared, which provide strong ultraviolet plasmonic circular dichroism, high-energy superchiral near-fields, and charge-selective protein detection.


Optical Materials Express | 2015

Low-temperature enhancement of plasmonic performance in silver films

Sriharsha V. Jayanti; Jong Hyuk Park; A. Dejneka; Dagmar Chvostova; Kevin M. McPeak; Xiaoshu Chen; Sang Hyun Oh; David J. Norris

While plasmonic metals can manipulate optical energy at the nanoscale, they suffer from significant losses at visible wavelengths. We investigate the potential of low temperature to decrease such losses in optically thick Ag films. We extract the complex dielectric function (or relative permittivity) from spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements for smooth single-crystalline, smooth polycrystalline, and rough polycrystalline films down to liquid-helium temperatures and fit these data to a temperature-dependent Drude model. Smooth single-crystalline films exhibited the largest improvements relative to room temperature. Below 50 K, the surface plasmon polariton propagation lengths increased by ~50% at 650 nm. In rough polycrystalline films, improvements of 10% are expected.


Science Advances | 2017

A customizable class of colloidal-quantum-dot spasers and plasmonic amplifiers

Stephan J. P. Kress; Jian Cui; Patrik Rohner; David K. Kim; Felipe V. Antolinez; Karl-Augustin Zaininger; Sriharsha V. Jayanti; Patrizia Richner; Kevin M. McPeak; Dimos Poulikakos; David J. Norris

Colloidal quantum dots in silver cavities result in a versatile class of laser-like plasmonic devices for on-chip use. Colloidal quantum dots are robust, efficient, and tunable emitters now used in lighting, displays, and lasers. Consequently, when the spaser—a laser-like source of high-intensity, narrow-band surface plasmons—was first proposed, quantum dots were specified as the ideal plasmonic gain medium for overcoming the significant intrinsic losses of plasmons. Many subsequent spasers, however, have required a single material to simultaneously provide gain and define the plasmonic cavity, a design unable to accommodate quantum dots and other colloidal nanomaterials. In addition, these and other designs have been ill suited for integration with other elements in a larger plasmonic circuit, limiting their use. We develop a more open architecture that decouples the gain medium from the cavity, leading to a versatile class of quantum dot–based spasers that allow controlled generation, extraction, and manipulation of plasmons. We first create aberration-corrected plasmonic cavities with high quality factors at desired locations on an ultrasmooth silver substrate. We then incorporate quantum dots into these cavities via electrohydrodynamic printing or drop-casting. Photoexcitation under ambient conditions generates monochromatic plasmons (0.65-nm linewidth at 630 nm, Q ~ 1000) above threshold. This signal is extracted, directed through an integrated amplifier, and focused at a nearby nanoscale tip, generating intense electromagnetic fields. More generally, our device platform can be straightforwardly deployed at different wavelengths, size scales, and geometries on large-area plasmonic chips for fundamental studies and applications.


Nano Letters | 2017

Direct Patterning of Colloidal Quantum-Dot Thin Films for Enhanced and Spectrally Selective Out-Coupling of Emission

Ferry Prins; David K. Kim; Jian Cui; Eva De Leo; Leo L. Spiegel; Kevin M. McPeak; David J. Norris

We report on a template-stripping method for the direct surface patterning of colloidal quantum-dot thin films to produce highly luminescent structures with feature sizes less than 100 nm. Through the careful design of high quality bull’s-eye gratings we can produce strong directional beaming (10° divergence) with up to 6-fold out-coupling enhancement of spontaneous emission in the surface-normal direction. A transition to narrow single-mode lasing is observed in these same structures at thresholds as low as 120 μJ/cm2. In addition, we demonstrate that these structures can be fabricated on flexible substrates. Finally, making use of the size-tunable character of colloidal quantum dots, we demonstrate spectrally selective out-coupling of light from mixed quantum-dot films. Our results provide a straightforward route toward significantly improved optical properties of colloidal quantum-dot assemblies.

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David K. Kim

University of Pennsylvania

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