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Nonlocal effects in plasmonic metasurfaces with almost touching surfaces

Geometrical singularities in plasmonic metasurfaces have recently been proposed for the enhancement of light-matter interactions, owing to their broadband light-harvesting properties and extreme plasmon confinement. However, the large plasmon momenta thus achieved lead to failure of local descriptions of the optical response of metals. Here we study a class of metasurfaces consisting of a periodic metal slab with a smooth modulation of its thickness. When the thinnest part shrinks, the two surfaces almost touch, forming a near-singular point. Using transformation optics, we show analytically how nonlocal effects, such as a blueshift of the resonance peaks and a reduced density of states, become important and cannot be ignored in this singular regime. The method developed in this paper is very general and can be used to model a variety of metasurfaces, providing valuable insight in the current context of ultra-thin plasmonic structures.

preprint2019arXivOpen access
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