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research article

Molecular Orbital Gates for Plasmon Excitation

Lutz, Theresa
•
Grosse, Christoph
•
Dette, Christian
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2013
Nano Letters

Future combinations of plasmonics with nanometer-size electronic circuits require strategies to control the electrical excitation of plasmons at the length scale of individual molecules. A unique tool to study the electrical plasmon excitation with ultimate resolution is scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Inelastic tunnel processes generate plasmons in the tunnel gap that partially radiate into the far field where they are detectable as photons. Here we employ STM to study individual tris-(phenylpyridine)-iridium complexes on a C-60 monolayer, and investigate the influence of their electronic structure on the plasmon excitation between the Ag(111) substrate and an Ag-covered Au tip. We demonstrate that the highest occupied molecular orbital serves as a spatially and energetically confined nanogate for plasmon excitation. This opens the way for using molecular tunnel junctions as electrically controlled plasmon sources.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/nl401177b
Web of Science ID

WOS:000320485100087

Author(s)
Lutz, Theresa
Grosse, Christoph
Dette, Christian
Kabakchiev, Alexander
Schramm, Frank
Ruben, Mario
Gutzler, Rico
Kuhnke, Klaus
Schlickum, Uta
Kern, Klaus  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Amer Chemical Soc

Published in
Nano Letters
Volume

13

Issue

6

Start page

2846

End page

2850

Subjects

Molecular orbitals

•

STM

•

STM-induced luminescence

•

plasmons

•

Ir(ppy)(3)

•

organic molecules

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSEN  
Available on Infoscience
October 1, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/95252
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