Simone Panaro
Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Simone Panaro.
Nano Letters | 2015
Simone Panaro; Adnan Nazir; R. Proietti Zaccaria; Luca Razzari; Carlo Liberale; F. De Angelis; Andrea Toma
Outstanding results have been achieved in the localization of optical electric fields via ultrasmall plasmonic cavities, paving the way to the subdiffractive confinement of local electromagnetic fields. However, due to the intrinsic constraints related to conventional architectures, no comparable squeezing factors have been managed yet for the magnetic counterpart of radiation, practically hindering the detection and manipulation of magneto-optical effects at the nanoscale. Here, we observe a strong magnetic field nanofocusing in the infrared, promoted by the induction of a coil-type Fano resonance. By triggering the coil current via a quadrupole-like plasmonic mode, we straightforwardly boost the enhancement of the infrared magnetic field and perform its efficient squeezing in localized nanovolumes.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Waseem Raja; Angelo Bozzola; Pierfrancesco Zilio; Ermanno Miele; Simone Panaro; Hai Wang; Andrea Toma; Alessandro Alabastri; Francesco De Angelis; Remo Proietti Zaccaria
With the objective to conceive a plasmonic solar cell with enhanced photocurrent, we investigate the role of plasmonic nanoshells, embedded within a ultrathin microcrystalline silicon solar cell, in enhancing broadband light trapping capability of the cell and, at the same time, to reduce the parasitic loss. The thickness of the considered microcrystalline silicon (μc-Si) layer is only ~1/6 of conventional μc-Si based solar cells while the plasmonic nanoshells are formed by a combination of silica and gold, respectively core and shell. We analyze the cell optical response by varying both the geometrical and optical parameters of the overall device. In particular, the nanoshells core radius and metal thickness, the periodicity, the incident angle of the solar radiation and its wavelength are varied in the widest meaningful ranges. We further explain the reason for the absorption enhancement by calculating the electric field distribution associated to resonances of the device. We argue that both Fabry-Pérot-like and localized plasmon modes play an important role in this regard.
ACS Nano | 2016
Francesco Todisco; Marco Esposito; Simone Panaro; Milena De Giorgi; Lorenzo Dominici; Dario Ballarini; Antonio I. Fernández-Domínguez; Vittorianna Tasco; Massimo Cuscunà; Adriana Passaseo; Cristian Ciracì; Giuseppe Gigli; D. Sanvitto
Combining localized surface plasmons (LSPs) and diffractive surface waves (DSWs) in metallic nanoparticle gratings leads to the emergence of collective hybrid plasmonic-photonic modes known as surface lattice resonances (SLRs). These show reduced losses and therefore a higher Q factor with respect to pure LSPs, at the price of larger volumes. Thus, they can constitute a flexible and efficient platform for light-matter interaction. However, it remains an open question if there is, in terms of the Q/V ratio, a sizable gain with respect to the uncoupled LSPs or DSWs. This is a fundamental point to shed light upon if such modes want to be exploited, for instance, for cavity quantum electrodynamic effects. Here, using aluminum nanoparticle square gratings with unit cells consisting of narrow-gap disk dimers-a geometry featuring a very small modal volume-we demonstrate that an enhancement of the Q/V ratio with respect to the pure LSP and DSW is obtained for SLRs with a well-defined degree of plasmon hybridization. Simultaneously, we report a 5× increase of the Q/V ratio for the gap-coupled LSP with respect to that of the single nanoparticle. These outcomes are experimentally probed against the Rabi splitting, resulting from the coupling between the SLR and a J-aggregated molecular dye, showing an increase of 80% with respect to the DSW-like SLR sustained by the disk LSP of the dimer. The results of this work open the way toward more efficient applications for the exploitation of excitonic nonlinearities in hybrid plasmonic platforms.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Anwer Saeed; Simone Panaro; R. Proietti Zaccaria; Waseem Raja; Carlo Liberale; Michele Dipalo; Gabriele C. Messina; Haisong Wang; F. De Angelis; Andrea Toma
The sub-wavelength concentration and propagation of electromagnetic energy are two complementary aspects of plasmonics that are not necessarily co-present in a single nanosystem. Here we exploit the strong nanofocusing properties of stacked optical antennas in order to highly concentrate the electromagnetic energy into a 5 nm metal-insulator-metal (MIM) cavity and convert free radiation into guided modes. The proposed nano-architecture combines the concentration properties of optical nanoantennas with the propagation capability of MIM systems, paving the way to highly miniaturized on-chip plasmonic waveguiding.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Simone Panaro; Adnan Nazir; Carlo Liberale; Haisong Wang; F. De Angelis; R. Proietti Zaccaria; E. Di Fabrizio; Andrea Toma
In the last decade, several efforts have been spent in the study of near-field coupled systems, in order to induce hybridization of plasmonic modes. Within this context, particular attention has been recently paid on the possibility to couple conventional bright and dark modes. As a result of such phenomenon, a Fano resonance appears as a characteristic sharp dip in the scattering spectra. Here we show how, gradually coupling a single rod-like nanostructure to an aligned nanoantenna dimer, it is possible to induce the near-field activation of an anti-bonding dark mode. The high polarization sensitivity presented by the far-field response of T-shape trimer, combined with the sharp Fano resonance sustained by this plasmonic device, opens interesting perspectives towards a new era of photonic devices.
Archive | 2014
Angelo Accardo; Remo Proietti Zaccaria; Patrizio Candeloro; Francesco Gentile; Maria Laura Coluccio; Gobind Das; Roman Krahne; Carlo Liberale; Andrea Toma; Simone Panaro; Ermanno Miele; Manohar Chirumamilla; Vijayakumar P. Rajamanickam; Enzo Di Fabrizio
‘Metal structures as advanced materials in nanotechnology’ is a collection of fabrication and characterization techniques which involve metallic materials for the realization of advanced micro- and nanostructured devices.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Markus Betz; Abdulhakem Y. Elezzabi; Simone Panaro; Remo Proietti Zaccaria; Andrea Toma
Spintronics and spin-based technology rely on the ultra-fast unbalance of the electronic spin population in quite localized spatial regions. However, as a matter of fact, the low susceptibility of conventional materials at high frequencies strongly limits these phenomena, rendering the efficiency of magnetically active devices insufficient for application purposes. Among the possible strategies which can be envisaged, plasmonics offers a direct approach to increase the effect of local electronic unbalancing processes. By confining and enhancing free radiation in nm-size spatial regions, plasmonic nano-assemblies have demonstrated to support very intense electric and magnetic hot-spots. In particular, very recent studies have proven the fine control of magnetic fields in Fano resonance condition. The near-field-induced out-of-phase oscillation of localized surface plasmons has manifested itself with the arising of magnetic sub-diffractive hot-spots. Here, we show how this effect can be further boosted in the mid-infrared regime via the introduction of higher order plasmonic modes. The investigated system, namely Moon Trimer Resonator (MTR), combines the high efficiency of a strongly coupled nano-assembly in Fano interferential condition with the elevated tunability of the quadrupolar resonance supported by a moon-like geometry. The fine control of the apical gap in this unique nanostructure, characterizes a plasmonic device able to tune its resonance without any consequence on the magnetic hot-spot size, thus enabling an efficient squeezing in the infrared.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Simone Panaro; Remo Proietti Zaccaria; Andrea Toma
Spintronics and spin-based technology rely on the ultra-fast unbalance of the electronic spin population in quite localized spatial regions. However, as a matter of fact, the low susceptibility of conventional materials at high frequencies strongly limits these phenomena, rendering the efficiency of magnetically active devices insufficient for application purposes. Among the possible strategies which can be envisaged, plasmonics offers a direct approach to increase the effect of local electronic unbalancing processes. By confining and enhancing free radiation in nm-size spatial regions, plasmonic nano-assemblies have demonstrated to support very intense electric and magnetic hot-spots. In particular, very recent studies have proven the fine control of magnetic fields in Fano resonance condition. The near-field-induced out-of-phase oscillation of localized surface plasmons has manifested itself with the arising of magnetic sub-diffractive hot-spots. Here, we show how this effect can be further boosted in the mid-infrared regime via the introduction of higher order plasmonic modes. The investigated system, namely Moon Trimer Resonator, combines the high efficiency of a strongly coupled nano-assembly in Fano interferential condition with the elevated tunability of the quadrupolar resonance supported by a moon-like geometry. The fine control of the apical gap in this unique nanostructure, characterizes a plasmonic device able to tune its resonance without any consequence on the magnetic hot-spot size, thus enabling an efficient squeezing in the infrared.
Latin America Optics and Photonics Conference (2012), paper LT4B.1 | 2012
Luca Razzari; Andrea Toma; Matteo Clerici; Mostafa Shalaby; Salvatore Tuccio; Simone Panaro; Manohar Chirumamilla; Ibraheem Al-Naib; Sergio Marras; Carlo Liberale; Remo Proietti Zaccaria; Gobind Das; Francesco De Angelis; Andrea Falqui; Marco Peccianti; T. Ozaki; Roberto Morandotti; Enzo Di Fabrizio
We investigate the resonance characteristics of terahertz nanoantenna arrays, both numerically and experimentally. We demonstrate their tunability and their significant field enhancement properties, which can find several applications in terahertz spectroscopy and nonlinear optics.
Nano Letters | 2014
Adnan Nazir; Simone Panaro; R. Proietti Zaccaria; Carlo Liberale; F. De Angelis; Andrea Toma