Sviatlana Viarbitskaya
University of Burgundy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sviatlana Viarbitskaya.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Olivier Demichel; Benoit Cluzel; Colas des Francs G; Alexandre Bouhelier
Remote excitation and emission of two-photon luminescence and second-harmonic generation are observed in micrometer long gold rod optical antennas upon local illumination with a tightly focused near-infrared femtosecond laser beam. We show that these nonlinear radiations are emitted from the entire antenna and the measured far-field angular patterns bear the information regarding the nature and origins of the respective nonlinear processes. We demonstrate that the nonlinear responses are locally induced by a propagating surface plasmon at the excitation frequency, enabling thereby a polariton-mediated spatial tailoring and design of coherent and incoherent nonlinear responses.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2012
Alexandre Teulle; Renaud Marty; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Arnaud Arbouet; Erik Dujardin; Christian Girard; Gérard Colas des Francs
One of the main purposes of nanoplasmonics is the miniaturization of optical and electro-optical components that could be integrable in coplanar geometry. In this context, we propose a numerical model of a polarized scanning optical microscope able to faithfully reproduce both photon luminescence and temperature distribution images associated with complex plasmonic structures. The images are computed, pixel by pixel, through a complete self-consistent scheme based on the Green dyadic functions (GDF) formalism. The basic principle consists in the numerical implementation of a realistic three-dimensional light beam acting as a virtual light tip able to probe the volume of plasmonic structures. Two different acquisition procedures, respectively based on two-photon luminescence emission and local heating, are discussed in the case of gold colloidal particles.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Alexandre Teulle; Aurélien Cuche; Jadab Sharma; Christian Girard; Erik Dujardin; Arnaud Arbouet
The 2D optical field intensity distribution in sub-micron, ultrathin, and crystalline gold platelets is investigated by two-photon luminescence (TPL) microscopy. In particular, the evolution of the TPL maps as the particle morphology undergoes a transition from triangular to hexagonal reveals that the signatures of the high-order surface plasmon states sustained by the platelets follows the same C3v to C6v symmetry redistribution. Experimental observations are precisely accounted for by theoretical simulations based on the Green dyadic method.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Aurélien Cuche; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Jadab Sharma; Arnaud Arbouet; Christian Girard; Erik Dujardin
Crystalline gold nanoprisms of sub-micrometric size sustain high order plasmon modes in the visible and near infrared range that open a new realm for plasmon modal design, integrated coplanar devices and logic gates. In this article, we explore the tailoring of the surface plasmon local density of states (SP-LDOS) by embedding a single defect, namely a small hole, carved in the platelet by focused ion beam (FIB). The change in the SP-LDOS of the hybrid structure is monitored by two-photon luminescence (TPL) microscopy. The dependency of the two-dimensional optical field intensity maps on the linear polarization of the tightly focused femtosecond laser beam reveals the conditions for which the hole defect significantly affects the initial modes. A detailed numerical analysis of the spectral characteristics of the SP-LDOS based on the Green dyadic method clearly indicates that the hole size and location can be exploited to tune or remove selected SP modes.
ACS Photonics | 2018
Upkar Kumar; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Aurélien Cuche; Christian Girard; Sreenath Bolisetty; Raffaele Mezzenga; Gérard Colas des Francs; Alexandre Bouhelier; Erik Dujardin
On-chip optoelectronic and all-optical information processing paradigms require compact implementation of signal transfer for which nanoscale surface plasmons circuitry offers relevant solutions. This work demonstrates the directional signal transmittance mediated by 2D plasmonic eigenmodes supported by crystalline cavities. Channel devices comprising two mesoscopic triangular input and output ports and sustaining delocalized, higher-order plasmon resonances in the visible to infra-red range are shown to enable the controllable transmittance between two confined entry and exit ports coupled over a distance exceeding 2 μm. The transmittance is attenuated by > 20dB upon rotating the incident linear polarization, thus offering a convenient switching mechanism. The optimal transmittance for a given operating wavelength depends on the geometrical design of the device that sets the spatial and spectral characteristic of the supporting delocalized mode. Our approach is highly versatile and opens the way to more complex information processing using pure plasmonic or hybrid nanophotonic architectures.
european quantum electronics conference | 2017
Olivier Demichel; Régis Méjard; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Alexandre Bouhelier; Benoit Cluzel
The large field enhancement generated at the surface of a resonant plasmonic nanoparticle, or optical antennas, is the key mechanism that eventually led to the development of nonlinear plasmonics [1-2]. While the resonance may boost the nonlinear yield of an adjacent structure or surrounding medium, it was soon realized that optical antennas possess nonlinear coefficients comparable or exceeding those of standard nonlinear optical materials [3]. We discuss here two nonlinear optical processes — incoherent multi-photon luminescence (MPL) and coherent second-harmonic generation (SHG) — emitted from gold rod optical antennas upon local illumination with a tightly focused femtosecond near-infrared laser beam.
ACS Photonics | 2015
Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Aurélien Cuche; Alexandre Teulle; Jadab Sharma; Christian Girard; Arnaud Arbouet; Erik Dujardin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014
T. Jesper Jacobsson; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Emad Mukhtar; Tomas Edvinsson
ACS Photonics | 2016
Olivier Demichel; Marlène Petit; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Régis Méjard; Frédérique de Fornel; Edouard Hertz; Franck Billard; Alexandre Bouhelier; Benoit Cluzel
Optics Communications | 2017
Aurélien Cuche; Sviatlana Viarbitskaya; Upkar Kumar; Jadab Sharma; Arnaud Arbouet; Christian Girard; Erik Dujardin