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Dive into the research topics where Stuart K. Earl is active.

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Featured researches published by Stuart K. Earl.


Nano Letters | 2013

The Dark Side of Plasmonics

Daniel E. Gómez; Zhi Qin Teo; Matteo Altissimo; Timothy J. Davis; Stuart K. Earl; Ann Roberts

Plasmonic dark modes are pure near-field modes that can arise from the plasmon hybridization in a set of interacting nanoparticles. When compared to bright modes, dark modes have longer lifetimes due to their lack of a net dipole moment, making them attractive for a number of applications. We demonstrate the excitation and optical detection of a collective dark plasmonic mode from individual plasmonic trimers. The trimers consist of triangular arrangements of gold nanorods, and due to this symmetry, the lowest-energy dark plasmonic mode can interact with radially polarized light. The experimental data presented confirm the excitation of this mode, and its assignment is supported with an electrostatic approximation wherein these dark modes are described in terms of plasmon hybridization. The strong confinement of energy in these modes and their associated near fields hold great promise for achieving strong coupling to single photon emitters.


Optics Express | 2013

Tunable optical antennas enabled by the phase transition in vanadium dioxide

Stuart K. Earl; Timothy D. James; Timothy J. Davis; J. C. McCallum; Robert E. Marvel; Richard F. Haglund; Ann Roberts

Optical antennas, subwavelength metallic structures resonating at visible frequencies, are a relatively new branch of antenna technology being applied in science, technology and medicine. Dynamically tuning the resonances of these antennas would increase their range of application and offer potential increases in plasmonic device efficiencies. Silver nanoantenna arrays were fabricated on a thin film of the phase change material vanadium dioxide (VO(2)) and the resonant wavelength of these arrays was modulated by increasing the temperature of the substrate above the critical temperature (approximately 68 °C). Depending on the array, wavelength modulation of up to 110 nm was observed.


APL Photonics | 2017

Switchable polarization rotation of visible light using a plasmonic metasurface

Stuart K. Earl; Timothy D. James; Daniel E. Gómez; Robert E. Marvel; Richard F. Haglund; Ann Roberts

A metasurface comprising an array of silver nanorods supported by a thin film of the phase change material vanadium dioxide is used to rotate the primary polarization axis of visible light at a pre-determined wavelength. The dimensions of the rods were selected such that, across the two phases of vanadium dioxide, the two lateral localized plasmon resonances (in the plane of the metasurface) occur at the same wavelength. Illumination with linearly polarized light at 45° to the principal axes of the rod metasurface enables excitation of both of these resonances. Modulating the phase of the underlying substrate, we show that it is possible to reversibly switch which axis of the metasurface is resonant at the operating wavelength. Analysis of the resulting Stokes parameters indicates that the orientation of the principal linear polarization axis of the reflected signal is rotated by 90° around these wavelengths. Dynamic metasurfaces such as these have the potential to form the basis of an ultra-compact, low-...


Proceedings of SPIE: SPIE Micro+Nano Materials, Devices, and Applications, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 8-11 December 2013 / James Friend and H. Hoe Tan (eds.) | 2013

Vanadium dioxide thickness effects on tunable optical antennas

Stuart K. Earl; Timothy D. James; Robert E. Marvel; Daniel E. Gómez; Timothy J. Davis; Jason Valentine; J. C. McCallum; Richard F. Haglund; Ann Roberts

Vanadium Dioxide is an optically dense phase change material that has been applied to modulating the resonances of plasmonic structures resonant in the THz, infrared and optical ranges. It has been shown previously that fabrication of optical antennas on thin films of Vanadium Dioxide can result in a resonance shift of more than 10% across the phase change. This post-fabrication, dynamic tuning mechanism has the potential to significantly increase the possible applications of plasmonic devices. Here, we show that optical antenna arrays fabricated on differing thicknesses of Vanadium Dioxide supported by a silicon substrate show a dependence of their resonant wavelengths on this thickness. Along with the geometry of the antennas in the arrays this constitutes an additional degree of freedom in the design of the tuning range of these devices, offering further potential for optimisation of this mechanism. The potential extra blue-shift provided by optimising this thickness may be used, for example, in lieu of reducing antenna dimensions to avoid increasing antenna absorption and the additional plasmonic heating that can result.


Science Advances | 2018

Toward broadband, dynamic structuring of a complex plasmonic field

Shibiao Wei; Guangyuan Si; Michael Malek; Stuart K. Earl; Luping Du; Shan Shan Kou; Xiaocong Yuan; Jiao Lin

Researchers report a reconfigurable and wavelength-independent platform for generating a tailored plasmonic field distribution. The ability to tailor a coherent surface plasmon polariton (SPP) field is an important step toward many new opportunities for a broad range of nanophotonic applications. Previously, both scanning a converging SPP spot and designing SPP profiles using an ensemble of spots have been demonstrated. SPPs, however, are normally excited by intense, coherent light sources, that is, lasers. Hence, interference between adjacent spots is inevitable and will affect the overall SPP field distributions. We report a reconfigurable and wavelength-independent platform for generating a tailored two-dimensional (2D) SPP field distribution by considering the coherent field as a whole rather than as individual spots. With this new approach, the inherent constraints in a 2D coherent field distribution are revealed. Our design approach works not only for SPP waves but also for other 2D wave systems such as surface acoustic waves.


Small | 2017

Luminescence of a Transition Metal Complex Inside a Metamaterial Nanocavity

Timothy U. Connell; Stuart K. Earl; Charlene Ng; Ann Roberts; Timothy J. Davis; Jonathan M. White; Anastasios Polyzos; Daniel E. Gómez

Modification of the local density of optical states using metallic nanostructures leads to enhancement in the number of emitted quanta and photocatalytic turnover of luminescent materials. In this work, the fabrication of a metamaterial is presented that consists of a nanowire separated from a metallic mirror by a polymer thin film doped with a luminescent organometallic iridium(III) complex. The large spin-orbit coupling of the heavy metal atom results in an excited state with significant magnetic-dipole character. The nanostructured architecture supports two distinct optical modes and their assignment achieved with the assistance of numerical simulations. The simulations show that one mode is characterized by strong confinement of the electric field and the other by strong confinement of the magnetic field. These modes elicit drastic changes in the emitters photophysical properties, including dominant nanocavity-derived modes observable in the emission spectra along with significant increases in emission intensity and the total decay rate. A combination of simulations and momentum-resolved spectroscopy helps explain the mechanism of the different interactions of each optical mode supported by the metamaterial with the excited state of the emitter.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Nanometers to centimeters: novel optical nano-antennas, with an eye to scaled production

Timothy D. James; Jasper J. Cadusch; Stuart K. Earl; Evgeniy Panchenko; Paul Mulvaney; Timothy J. Davis; Ann Roberts

Optical nano-antennas have been the focus of intense research recently due to their ability to manipulate electromagnetic radiation on a subwavelength scale, and there is major interest in such devices for a wide variety of applications in photonics, sensing, and imaging. Significant effort has been put into developing highly compact, novel, next-generation light sources, which have great potential in realizing efficient sub-wavelength single photon sources and enhanced biological and chemical sensors. We have developed a number of innovative optical antenna designs including elements of chiral metasurfaces for enabling circularly polarized emission from quantum sources, new designs derived from Radio Frequency (RF) elements for quantum source enhancement and directionality, and nanostructures for investigating plasmonic dark-modes that have the ability to significantly reduce the Q-factor of nano-antennas. A challenge, however, remains the development of a scalable nanofabrication technology. The capacity to mass-produce nano-antennas will have a considerable impact on the commercial viability of these devices, and greatly improve research throughput. Here we present recent progress in the development of scalable fabrication strategies for producing of nano-antennas and antenna arrays, along with slot based plasmonic optical devices.


conference on optoelectronic and microelectronic materials and devices | 2012

Vanadium Dioxide based tunable plasmonic antennas

Timothy D. James; Stuart K. Earl; Jason Valentine; Timothy J. Davis; J. C. McCallum; Richard F. Haglund; Ann Roberts

Here we report on the integration of metallic nanorods with the phase-change material Vanadium Dioxide (VO2). The change in its optical constants that accompanies the VO2 phase transition permits the modulation of the resonant frequencies of these dipoles. This technique will underpin the development of dynamically tunable optical antennas.


Nanoscale | 2015

Collective excitation of plasmonic hot-spots for enhanced hot charge carrier transfer in metal/semiconductor contacts

Adrien Piot; Stuart K. Earl; Charlene Ng; Svetlana Dligatch; Ann Roberts; Timothy J. Davis; Daniel E. Gómez


Nanoscale | 2015

Material effects on V-nanoantenna performance

Stuart K. Earl; Daniel E. Gómez; Timothy D. James; Timothy J. Davis; Ann Roberts

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Ann Roberts

University of Melbourne

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Charlene Ng

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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