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      Light emission in nanogaps: overcoming quenching

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          Abstract

          Very large spontaneous-emission-rate enhancements (~1000) are obtained for quantum emitters coupled with tiny plasmonic resonance, especially when emitters are placed in the mouth of nanogaps formed by metal nanoparticles that are nearly in contact. This fundamental effect of light emission at subwavelength scales is well documented and understood as resulting from the smallness of nanogap modes. In contrasts, it is much less obvious to figure out whether the radiation efficiency is high in these gaps, or if the emission is quenched by metal absorption especially for tiny gaps a few nanometers wide; the whole literature only contains scattered electromagnetic calculations on the subject, which suggest that absorption and quenching can be kept at a small level despite the emitter proximity to metal. Thus through analytical derivations in the limit of small gap thickness, it is our objective to clarify why quantum emitters in nanogap antennas offer good efficiencies, what are the circumstances in which high efficiency is obtained, and whether there exists an upper bound for the maximum efficiency achievable.

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          Probing the mechanisms of large Purcell enhancement in plasmonic nanoantennas

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            2015-12-01
            Article
            10.1039/C5NH00059A
            1512.00572
            94085f41-8715-4984-85f5-8411c0189e95

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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            in Nanoscale Horizon, 2016
            physics.optics cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.mtrl-sci

            Condensed matter,Nanophysics,Optical materials & Optics
            Condensed matter, Nanophysics, Optical materials & Optics

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