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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Periodic Plasmonic Nanoantennas in a Piecewise Homogeneous Background

Siadat Mousavi, Saba 01 May 2012 (has links)
Optical nanoantennas have raised much interest during the past decade for their vast potential in photonics applications. This thesis investigates the response of periodic arrays of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles on a silicon substrate, covered by water, to variations of antenna dimensions. These arrays are illuminated by a plane wave source located inside the silicon substrate. Modal analysis was performed and the mode in the nanoantennas was identified. By characterizing the properties of this mode certain response behaviours of the system were explained. Expressions are offered to predict approximately the resonant length of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles, by accounting for the fringing fields at the antenna ends and the effects of the gap in dipoles. These expressions enable one to predict the resonant length of nanomonopoles within 20% and nanodipoles within 10% error, which significantly facilitates the design of such antennas for specific applications.
2

Periodic Plasmonic Nanoantennas in a Piecewise Homogeneous Background

Siadat Mousavi, Saba 01 May 2012 (has links)
Optical nanoantennas have raised much interest during the past decade for their vast potential in photonics applications. This thesis investigates the response of periodic arrays of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles on a silicon substrate, covered by water, to variations of antenna dimensions. These arrays are illuminated by a plane wave source located inside the silicon substrate. Modal analysis was performed and the mode in the nanoantennas was identified. By characterizing the properties of this mode certain response behaviours of the system were explained. Expressions are offered to predict approximately the resonant length of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles, by accounting for the fringing fields at the antenna ends and the effects of the gap in dipoles. These expressions enable one to predict the resonant length of nanomonopoles within 20% and nanodipoles within 10% error, which significantly facilitates the design of such antennas for specific applications.
3

Periodic Plasmonic Nanoantennas in a Piecewise Homogeneous Background

Siadat Mousavi, Saba January 2012 (has links)
Optical nanoantennas have raised much interest during the past decade for their vast potential in photonics applications. This thesis investigates the response of periodic arrays of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles on a silicon substrate, covered by water, to variations of antenna dimensions. These arrays are illuminated by a plane wave source located inside the silicon substrate. Modal analysis was performed and the mode in the nanoantennas was identified. By characterizing the properties of this mode certain response behaviours of the system were explained. Expressions are offered to predict approximately the resonant length of nanomonopoles and nanodipoles, by accounting for the fringing fields at the antenna ends and the effects of the gap in dipoles. These expressions enable one to predict the resonant length of nanomonopoles within 20% and nanodipoles within 10% error, which significantly facilitates the design of such antennas for specific applications.

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