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arXiv: 1404.4323
handle: 10261/147741
Mechanisms for one-dimensional photon sorting are theoretically studied in the framework of a couple mode method. The considered system is a nanopatterned structure composed of two different pixels drilled on the surface of a thin gold layer. Each pixel consists of a slit-groove array designed to squeeze a large fraction of the incident light into the central slit. The Double-Pixel is optimized to resolve two different frequencies in the near infrared. This system shows a high transmission efficiency and a small crosstalk. Its response is found to strongly depend on the effective area shared by overlapping pixels. Three different regimes for the process of photon sorting are identified and the main physical trends underneath in such regimes are unveiled. Optimal efficiencies for the photon sorting are obtained for a moderate number of grooves that overlap with grooves of the neighbor pixel. Results could be applied to optical and infrared detectors.
12 pages, 4 figures
Photon sensing, Nanostructured metals, Photon sorting, Plasmonics, FOS: Physical sciences, Physics - Optics, Optics (physics.optics)
Photon sensing, Nanostructured metals, Photon sorting, Plasmonics, FOS: Physical sciences, Physics - Optics, Optics (physics.optics)
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