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      Plasmon-mediated magneto-optical transparency

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          Abstract

          Magnetic field control of light is among the most intriguing methods for modulation of light intensity and polarization on sub-nanosecond timescales. The implementation in nanostructured hybrid materials provides a remarkable increase of magneto-optical effects. However, so far only the enhancement of already known effects has been demonstrated in such materials. Here we postulate a novel magneto-optical phenomenon that originates solely from suitably designed nanostructured metal-dielectric material, the so-called magneto-plasmonic crystal. In this material, an incident light excites coupled plasmonic oscillations and a waveguide mode. An in-plane magnetic field allows excitation of an orthogonally polarized waveguide mode that modifies optical spectrum of the magneto-plasmonic crystal and increases its transparency. The experimentally achieved light intensity modulation reaches 24%. As the effect can potentially exceed 100%, it may have great importance for applied nanophotonics. Further, the effect allows manipulating and exciting waveguide modes by a magnetic field and light of proper polarization.

          Abstract

          Magneto-optical effects, where magnetic fields affect light propagating through a material, are of interest for photonic devices such as switches. The magneto-optical effect discovered here in metal-dielectric nanostructures shows a strong light modulation that is suitable for nanophotonic applications.

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          Most cited references11

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          The Fano resonance in plasmonic nanostructures and metamaterials.

          Since its discovery, the asymmetric Fano resonance has been a characteristic feature of interacting quantum systems. The shape of this resonance is distinctively different from that of conventional symmetric resonance curves. Recently, the Fano resonance has been found in plasmonic nanoparticles, photonic crystals, and electromagnetic metamaterials. The steep dispersion of the Fano resonance profile promises applications in sensors, lasing, switching, and nonlinear and slow-light devices.
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            Nonreciprocal plasmonics enables giant enhancement of thin-film Faraday rotation.

            Light propagation is usually reciprocal. However, a static magnetic field along the propagation direction can break the time-reversal symmetry in the presence of magneto-optical materials. The Faraday effect in magneto-optical materials rotates the polarization plane of light, and when light travels backward the polarization is further rotated. This is applied in optical isolators, which are of crucial importance in optical systems. Faraday isolators are typically bulky due to the weak Faraday effect of available magneto-optical materials. The growing research endeavour in integrated optics demands thin-film Faraday rotators and enhancement of the Faraday effect. Here, we report significant enhancement of Faraday rotation by hybridizing plasmonics with magneto-optics. By fabricating plasmonic nanostructures on laser-deposited magneto-optical thin films, Faraday rotation is enhanced by one order of magnitude in our experiment, while high transparency is maintained. We elucidate the enhanced Faraday effect by the interplay between plasmons and different photonic waveguide modes in our system.
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              • Record: found
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              Designer Magnetoplasmonics with Nickel Nanoferromagnets

              We introduce a new perspective on magnetoplasmonics in nickel nanoferromagnets by exploiting the phase tunability of the optical polarizability due to localized surface plasmons and simultaneous magneto-optical activity. We demonstrate how the concerted action of nanoplasmonics and magnetization can manipulate the sign of rotation of the reflected light’s polarization (i.e., to produce Kerr rotation reversal) in ferromagnetic nanomaterials and, further, how this effect can be dynamically controlled and employed to devise conceptually new schemes for biochemosensing.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nat Commun
                Nat Commun
                Nature Communications
                Nature Pub. Group
                2041-1723
                10 July 2013
                : 4
                : 2128
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gori , 119991 Moscow, Russia
                [2 ]Prokhorov General Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences , Vavilov street 38, 119991 Moscow, Russia
                [3 ]Russian Quantum Center , 143025 Skolkovo, Moscow Region, Russia
                [4 ]Experimental Physics 2, TU Dortmund University , Otto-Hahn-Strasse 4, 44221 Dortmund, Germany
                [5 ]Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences , Politechnicheskaya 26, 194021 St. Petersburg, Russia
                [6 ]Image Processing Systems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences , Molodogvardeyskaya 151, 443001 Samara, Russia
                [7 ]Tata Institute of Fundamental Research , Homi Bhabha Road, 400005 Mumbai, India
                [8 ]Royal Institute of Technology, Kungl Tekniska Högskolan , 164 40 Stockholm-Kista, Sweden
                [9 ]Electron Science Research Institute, Edith Cowan University , Joondalup Drive 270, 6027 Joondalup, Western Australia, Australia
                [10 ]Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (State University), Institutskii 9 , 117303 Moscow, Russia
                Author notes
                Article
                ncomms3128
                10.1038/ncomms3128
                3717503
                23839481
                62e836e6-ba19-42b5-949b-c005bdfed82d
                Copyright © 2013, Nature Publishing Group, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited. All Rights Reserved.

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

                History
                : 26 March 2013
                : 07 June 2013
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