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research article

Revisiting Newton’s rings with a plasmonic optical flat for high-accuracy surface inspection

Zheng, Yun
•
Bian, Jie
•
Wang, Xiao-Long
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April 15, 2016
Light: Science & Applications

Two parallel optical surfaces often exhibit colorful fringes along the lines of equal thickness because of the interference of light. This simple phenomenon allows one to observe subwavelength corrugations on a reflective surface by simply placing on it a flat reference dielectric surface, a so-called optical flat, and inspecting the resultant interference pattern. In this work, we extend this principle from dielectric surfaces to two-dimensional plasmonic nanostructures. Optical couplings between an Au nanodisk array and an Au thin film were measured quantitatively using two different techniques, namely, the classical Newton’s rings method and a closed-loop nano-positioning system. Extremely high spectral sensitivity to the inter-surface distance was observed in the near-field coupling regime, where a 1-nm change in distance could alter the resonance wavelength by almost 10 nm, 440 times greater than the variation in the case without near-field coupling. With the help of a numerical fitting technique, the resonance wavelength could be determined with a precision of 0.03 nm, corresponding to a distance precision as high as 0.003 nm. Utilizing this effect, we demonstrated that a plasmonic nanodisk array can be utilized as a plasmonic optical flat, with which nanometer-deep grooves can be directly visualized using a low-cost microscope.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/lsa.2016.156
Web of Science ID

WOS:000387461800007

Author(s)
Zheng, Yun
Bian, Jie
Wang, Xiao-Long
Liu, Ju-Xiu
Feng, Peng
Ge, Hai-Xiong
Martin, Olivier J F  
Zhang, Wei-Hua
Date Issued

2016-04-15

Publisher

Springer

Published in
Light: Science & Applications
Volume

5

Issue

10

Article Number

e16156

Subjects

Nanophotonics

•

Plasmonics

Note

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
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Available on Infoscience
March 31, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/136166
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