Abstract.
Two-photon photoemission spectroscopy using femtosecond laser pulses is used to investigate the excitation and decay mechanisms of the surface plasmon resonance in Ag nanoparticles grown on graphite. The resonant excitation of this collective excitation leads to a two-orders-of-magnitude-enhanced two-photon photoemission yield from a graphite surface with Ag nanoparticles compared to the yield from pure graphite. From the shape of the photoemission spectra, the polarization dependence of the photoemission yield and the excitation probabilities for different excitation pathways we conclude that excitation with 400-nm femtosecond laser pulses leads to the coherent multiple excitation of the surface plasmon in the Ag nanoparticles. This multiply excited plasmon mode can decay via the coupling to a single-particle excitation leading to the emission of an electron if its final state is located in the continuum. The surface plasmon in metallic nanoparticles is a model system to investigate collective excitations in multiphoton processes.
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Received: 26 June 2000 / Accepted: 2 September 2000 / Published online: 12 October 2000
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Merschdorf, M., Pfeiffer, W., Thon, A. et al. Photoemission from multiply excited surface plasmons in Ag nanoparticles. Appl Phys A 71, 547–552 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003390000712
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003390000712