Tuesday, November 27, 2012

1211.6081 (Gregory R. Aizin et al.)

Transmission Line Theory of Collective Plasma Excitations in Periodic
Two-Dimensional Electron Systems: Finite Plasmonic Crystals and Tamm States
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Gregory R. Aizin, Gregory C. Dyer
We present a comprehensive theory of the one-dimensional plasmonic crystal formed in the grating gated two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in semiconductor heterostructures. To describe collective plasma excitations in the 2DEG, we develop a generalized transmission line theoretical formalism consistent with the plasma hydrodynamic model. We then apply this formalism to analyze the plasmonic spectra of 2DEG systems with step-like periodic changes of electron density and/or gate screening. We show that in a periodically modulated 2DEG, a plasmonic crystal is formed and derive closed-form analytical expressions describing its energy band spectrum for both infinite and finite size crystals. Our results demonstrate a non-monotonic dependence of the plasmonic band gap width on the electron density modulation. At so-called transparency points where the plasmon propagates through the periodic 2DEG in a resonant manner, the plasmonic band gaps vanish. In semi-infinite plasmonic crystals, we demonstrate the formation of plasmonic Tamm states and analytically derive their energy dispersion and spatial localization. Finally, we present detailed numerical analysis of the plasmonic band structure of a finite four-period plasmonic crystal terminated either by an Ohmic contact or by an infinite barrier on each side. We trace the evolution of the plasmonic band spectrum, including the Tamm states, with changing electron density modulation and analyze the boundary conditions necessary for formation of the Tamm states. We also analyze interaction between the Tamm states formed at the opposite edges of the short length plasmonic crystal. The validity of our theoretical approach was confirmed in experimental studies of plasmonic crystals in short modulated plasmonic cavities which demonstrated excellent quantitative agreement between theory and experiment.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1211.6081

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