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Dive into the research topics where Zhong-Jian Yang is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhong-Jian Yang.


Optics Letters | 2011

Fano resonances in dipole-quadrupole plasmon coupling nanorod dimers

Zhong-Jian Yang; Zong-Suo Zhang; Lihui Zhang; Qunqing Li; Zhong-Hua Hao; Qu-Quan Wang

We theoretically investigate the plasmon coupling in metallic nanorod dimers. A pronounced dip is found in the extinction spectrum due to plasmonic Fano resonance, which is induced by destructive interference between the bright dipole plasmon of a short nanorod and the dark quadrupole plasmon of a long nanorod. This Fano interference can also be explained as the coupling between the bright and dark modes both supported by the whole dimer. The Fano resonance can be tuned by adjusting the spatial or spectral separation between two nanorods in the dimer.


Nano Letters | 2011

Tuning Gold Nanorod-Nanoparticle Hybrids into Plasmonic Fano Resonance for Dramatically Enhanced Light Emission and Transmission

Zhang-Kai Zhou; Xiao-Niu Peng; Zhong-Jian Yang; Zong-Suo Zhang; Min Li; Xiong-Rui Su Su; Qing Zhang; Xin-Yan Shan; Qu-Quan Wang; Zhenyu Zhang

We investigate the optical response of a gold nanorod array coupled with a semicontinuous nanoparticle film. We find that, as the gold nanoparticle film is adjusted to the percolating regime, the nanorod-film hybrids are tuned into plasmonic Fano resonance, characterized by the coherent coupling of discrete plasmonic modes of the nanorod array with the continuum band of the percolating film. Consequently, optical transmission of the percolating film is substantially enhanced. Even more strikingly, electromagnetic fields around the nanorod array become much stronger, as reflected by 2 orders of magnitude enhancement in the avalanche multiphoton luminescence. These findings may prove instrumental in the design of various plasmonic nanodevices.


ACS Nano | 2010

Plasmon-mediated radiative energy transfer across a silver nanowire array via resonant transmission and subwavelength imaging.

Zhang-Kai Zhou; Min Li; Zhong-Jian Yang; Xiao-Niu Peng; Xiong-Rui Su; Zong-Suo Zhang; Jian-Bo Li; Nam-Chol Kim; Xue-Feng Yu; Li Zhou; Zhong-Hua Hao; Qu-Quan Wang

Efficient plasmon-mediated excitation energy transfer between the CdSe/ZnS semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) across the silver nanowire array up to 560 nm in length is observed. The subwavelength imaging and spectral response of the silver nanowire arrays with near-field point-source excitations are revealed by theoretical simulations. Our studies demonstrate three advantages of the nanosystem: efficient exciton-plasmon conversion at the input side of the array through near-field strong coupling, directional waveguidance and resonant transmission via half-wave plasmon modes of the nanowire array, and subwavelength imaging at the output side of the array. These advantages allow a long-range radiative excitation energy transfer with a high efficiency and a good directionality.


Nano Letters | 2012

Symmetric and Asymmetric Au–AgCdSe Hybrid Nanorods

Shan Liang; Xiao-Li Liu; Yue-Zhou Yang; Ya-Lan Wang; Jia-Hong Wang; Zhong-Jian Yang; Liangbing Wang; Shuangfeng Jia; Xue-Feng Yu; Li Zhou; Jianbo Wang; Jie Zeng; Qu-Quan Wang; Zhenyu Zhang

This paper describes a facile method for synthesis of Au-AgCdSe hybrid nanorods with controlled morphologies and spatial distributions. The synthesis involved deposition of Ag tips at the ends of Au nanorod seeds, followed by selenization of the Ag tips and overgrowth of CdSe on these sites. By simply manipulating the pH value of the system, the AgCdSe could selectively grow at one end, at both the ends or on the side surface of a Au nanorod, generating a mike-like, dumbbell-like, or toothbrush-like hybrid nanorod, respectively. These three types of Au-AgCdSe hybrid nanorods displayed distinct localized surface plasmon resonance and photoluminescence properties, demonstrating an effective pathway for maneuvering the optical properties of nanocrystals.


Nano Letters | 2015

Optical magnetism and plasmonic Fano resonances in metal-insulator-metal oligomers.

Ruggero Verre; Zhong-Jian Yang; Timur Shegai; Mikael Käll

The possibility of achieving optical magnetism at visible frequencies using plasmonic nanostructures has recently been a subject of great interest. The concept is based on designing structures that support plasmon modes with electron oscillation patterns that imitate current loops, that is, magnetic dipoles. However, the magnetic resonances are typically spectrally narrow, thereby limiting their applicability in, for example, metamaterial designs. We show that a significantly broader magnetic response can be realized in plasmonic pentamers constructed from metal-insulator-metal (MIM) sandwich particles. Each MIM unit acts as a magnetic meta-atom and the optical magnetism is rendered quasi-broadband through hybridization of the in-plane modes. We demonstrate that scattering spectra of individual MIM pentamers exhibit multiple Fano resonances and a broad subradiant spectral window that signals the magnetic interaction and a hierarchy of coupling effects in these intricate three-dimensional nanoparticle oligomers.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Twinned Fano interferences induced by hybridized plasmons in Au–Ag nanorod heterodimers

Zhong-Jian Yang; Zong-Suo Zhang; Wei Zhang; Zhong-Hua Hao; Qu-Quan Wang

We theoretically investigated the plasmon interferences and hybridization in the Au–Ag nanorod heterodimers. Twinned Fanolike profiles are observed in the absorption cross sections of the gold and silver nanorods in the heterodimers, the Fano factors of which have the opposite signs near the antibonding resonances, which are found to be induced by the destructive interferences of two hybridized local surface plasmons. Both the value and sign of the Fano factors could be tuned by adjusting rod-lengths, which could find the applications in the design of plasmonic nanodevices.


Nano Letters | 2015

Plasmon Enhanced Internal Photoemission in Antenna-Spacer-Mirror Based Au/TiO2 Nanostructures

Yurui Fang; Yang Jiao; Kunli Xiong; Robin Ogier; Zhong-Jian Yang; Shiwu Gao; Andreas B. Dahlin; Mikael Käll

Emission of photoexcited hot electrons from plasmonic metal nanostructures to semiconductors is key to a number of proposed nanophotonics technologies for solar harvesting, water splitting, photocatalysis, and a variety of optical sensing and photodetector applications. Favorable materials and catalytic properties make systems based on gold and TiO2 particularly interesting, but the internal photoemission efficiency for visible light is low because of the wide bandgap of the semiconductor. We investigated the incident photon-to-electron conversion efficiency of thin TiO2 films decorated with Au nanodisk antennas in an electrochemical circuit and found that incorporation of a Au mirror beneath the semiconductor amplified the photoresponse for light with wavelength λ = 500-950 nm by a factor 2-10 compared to identical structures lacking the mirror component. Classical electrodynamics simulations showed that the enhancement effect is caused by a favorable interplay between localized surface plasmon excitations and cavity modes that together amplify the light absorption in the Au/TiO2 interface. The experimentally determined internal quantum efficiency for hot electron transfer decreases monotonically with wavelength, similar to the probability for interband excitations with energy higher than the Schottky barrier obtained from a density functional theory band structure simulation of a thin Au/TiO2 slab.


Nanoscale | 2015

Dimer-on-mirror SERS substrates with attogram sensitivity fabricated by colloidal lithography

Aron Hakonen; Mikael Svedendahl; Robin Ogier; Zhong-Jian Yang; Kristof Lodewijks; Ruggero Verre; Timur Shegai; Per Ola Andersson; Mikael Käll

Nanoplasmonic substrates with optimized field-enhancement properties are a key component in the continued development of surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) molecular analysis but are challenging to produce inexpensively in large scale. We used a facile and cost-effective bottom-up technique, colloidal hole-mask lithography, to produce macroscopic dimer-on-mirror gold nanostructures. The optimized structures exhibit excellent SERS performance, as exemplified by detection of 2.5 and 50 attograms of BPE, a common SERS probe, using Raman microscopy and a simple handheld device, respectively. The corresponding Raman enhancement factor is of the order 10(11), which compares favourably to previously reported record performance values.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Switching of a single propagating plasmon by two quantum dots system

Nam-Chol Kim; Jian-Bo Li; Zhong-Jian Yang; Zhong-Hua Hao; Qu-Quan Wang

We investigated the scattering property of a single plasmon interacting with two quantum dots coupled to one-dimensional surface plasmonic waveguide. We demonstrated that the transmission of a single plasmon could be switched on or off by adjusting spectral detuning and controlling spatial separation of the two quantum dots. These transport properties of the nanosystem could find the applications in plasmonic nanodevices and quantum information processing.


ACS Nano | 2015

Gold Nanorod Rotary Motors Driven by Resonant Light Scattering.

Lei Shao; Zhong-Jian Yang; Daniel Andrén; Peter Johansson; Mikael Käll

Efficient and robust artificial nanomotors could provide a variety of exciting possibilities for applications in physics, biology and chemistry, including nanoelectromechanical systems, biochemical sensing, and drug delivery. However, the application of current man-made nanomotors is limited by their sophisticated fabrication techniques, low mechanical output power and severe environmental requirements, making their performance far below that of natural biomotors. Here we show that single-crystal gold nanorods can be rotated extremely fast in aqueous solutions through optical torques dominated by plasmonic resonant scattering of circularly polarized laser light with power as low as a few mW. The nanorods are trapped in 2D against a glass surface, and their rotational dynamics is highly dependent on their surface plasmon resonance properties. They can be kept continuously rotating for hours with limited photothermal side effects and they can be applied for detection of molecular binding with high sensitivity. Because of their biocompatibility, mechanical and thermal stability, and record rotation speeds reaching up to 42 kHz (2.5 million revolutions per minute), these rotary nanomotors could advance technologies to meet a wide range of future nanomechanical and biomedical needs in fields such as nanorobotics, nanosurgery, DNA manipulation and nano/microfluidic flow control.

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Li Zhou

Ministry of Education

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Mikael Käll

Chalmers University of Technology

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Ruggero Verre

Chalmers University of Technology

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