4. Numerical Results
Our numerical evaluations of the real and imaginary parts of the five non-vanishing dyadic Green’s function matrix elements of Equation (
25), Re
and Im
, respectively, are presented in graphical form in both 3D and density plots below in
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9,
Figure 10,
Figure 11,
Figure 12,
Figure 13,
Figure 14,
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17 as functions of
x and
y for frequency
THz. These numerical evaluations are exhibited for several values of distance
z away from the layer screen: We chose
(near-field),
(middle-field) and
(far-field). These figures reveal the structure of the Green’s function elements for the perforated layer in terms of near-field (
), middle-field (
) and far-field (
) zones for
. Our use of the terms “near-field”, “middle-field” and “far-field” do
not have the usual reference to distance from a center at the nano-hole relative to wavelength; instead, these terms are used here for describing
distance from the plasmonic layer relative to wavelength
. (This includes, for example, that a “near-field” figure exhibits results at both large and small lateral
-distances from the nano-hole so long as the
z-distance is small in relation to wavelength, etc.). In summary, near-field is defined as
, middle-field as
and far-field as
.
NOTATION: IN ALL FIGURES BELOW
Figure 3.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 3.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 4.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 4.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 5.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 5.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 6.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 6.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 7.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 7.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Near-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 8.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 8.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 9.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 9.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 10.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 10.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 11.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 11.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Middle-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 12.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 12.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 13.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 13.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 14.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 14.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 15.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 15.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 16.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 16.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 17.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
Figure 17.
(Color online). Figures (a,b) exhibit Re and (c,d) present Im (in 3D (a,c) and density (b,d) plots) for a perforated 2D plasmonic layer of GaAs in the presence of a nano-hole of radius at (Far-Field) for , , and where is the free-electron mass.
5. Concluding Remarks
In this paper, we have discussed the exact analytic solution and its thorough numerical analysis for the closed-form expression of the dyadic electromagnetic Green’s function of a perforated, thin 2D quantum plasmonic layer embedded in a 3D host medium in the presence of a subwavelength nano-hole. This solution is exact and devoid of assumptions, having represented the perforation in terms of a “contact interaction”-like 2D Dirac delta function and having represented the 2D layer localization to the plane
in terms of a 1D Dirac delta function. Such exactness is elusive in earlier work and in classic approaches to the analysis of electromagnetic transmission problems involving diffraction. Our results for the Green’s function have been applied to a number of calculations of electromagnetic wave transmission/diffraction through a perforated plasmonic layer with a subwavelength nano-hole for both normal and non-normal incidence, including both nano-hole transmission/diffraction effects jointly with transmission through the entire plasma layer [
1,
2,
3].
Earlier reports by Bethe [
6] and Levine and Schwinger [
7,
8,
9] have relied on the assumption that the screen is perfectly conducting and is represented by the associated metallic boundary conditions, which are simulated by the use of fictitious magnetic charges and currents. These reports also review the limitations of the classic diffraction studies of Kirchoff, Stratton and Chu and Lord Rayleigh. Other important analyses of
resonant enhanced and collimated EM wave transmission/diffraction by subwavelength slits in thick metal films have been reported by Kukhlevsky, Mechler, Csapo, Janssens and Samek [
10,
11] and Neerhoff and Mur [
12]. This strong enhancement of light by subwavelength apertures is nicely reviewed by Genet and Ebbersen [
13], who emphasize the important role of the interaction of the EM wave with electronic resonances in the surface of the metal film. Of course, the incident EM wavefield drives such electronic modes to subsequently re-radiate EM field contributions that add to the incident field to ensure the satisfaction of the perfect metal boundary conditions. It is in the context of these references that the present results are meaningful, albeit with significant contrast: Firstly, the limitation to perfect metal boundary conditions is
not appropriate and is
not employed here, as a layer of plasma has been addressed in our work, with
no explicit reference to boundary conditions (which are implicit in the layer conductivity distribution). Secondly, we address a
thin (2D) layer of plasma rather than a thick slab, and in our case, the interaction of the incident EM wave with the electronic resonances of the material is
explicitly evident in the structure of the “hole” Green’s function of Equation (
25), whose elements involve [1 +
G(0,0;0,0;
)]
, and the corresponding dispersion relation, det[1 +
G(0,0;0,0;
)] = 0, identifies the 2D sheet polariton/plasmon resonant modes of the material system explicitly. Obviously, with this determinant in the denominator of the “hole” Green’s function, a driving frequency
that causes the determinant to vanish leads to the resonant enhancement of the EM radiation by the excitation of the radiating 2D sheet polaritons/plasmons, which contribute to the transmitted electromagnetic field throughout the thin layer as well as through the aperture. Finally, we again emphasize that our results are
exact within the framework of the “contact interaction”-like Dirac delta function representation of the material dimensions involved, which are pertinent to 2D/nano systems, and are not limited by other approximations like perfect metal boundary conditions.
The inspection of the resulting Green’s function elements exhibited in both 3D and density plots (above) shows that, for large r↦x> 2500 nm, the spatial dependence of the Green’s function for electromagnetic transmission/diffraction through the perforated plasmonic layer becomes oscillatory as a function of r(x) with peaks uniformly spaced. In this regard, it should be noted that our designation of near, middle and far zones is defined in terms of z-values (50R, 300R, 1000R) alone, to the exclusion of r: In consequence of this exclusion, the figures actually carry useful information for r in all radiation zones as conventionally defined in terms of the incident wavelength ≈ 2/q. Furthermore, this approach to oscillatory behavior as a function of r with uniformly spaced peaks is accompanied by a geometric 1/r-diminution of the amplitude of the Green’s function. On the other hand, our far-zone figures also show that when z < r = x, the Green’s function flattens as a function of r = x into a region of constancy. In connection with this, it should be borne in mind that the electromagnetic wave transmission occurs through the entire thin plasmonic layer, as well as through the nano-hole aperture in the layer. For sufficiently large r > z, the nano-hole contribution to transmission is relatively ineffective.