Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1538135 Optics Communications 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The surface photoelectric effect and the surface plasmon resonances appear when a pp/transverse magnetic polarized laser hits a gas–solid interface. We model this effect in the long wave length (LWL) domain (λvac > 10 nm, ħω < 124 eV) by combining the Ampère–Maxwell equation, written in classical approximation, with the material equation for the susceptibility. The resulting model, called the vector potential from the electron density (VPED), calculates the susceptibility as a product of the bulk susceptibility and the electron density of the actual system. The bulk susceptibility is a sum of the bound electron scalar susceptibility taken from the experiment and of the conduction electron non-local isotropic susceptibility tensor in a jellium metal (Lindhard, 1954 [1]). The electron density is the square of the wave function solution of the Schrödinger equation. The analysis of observables, the reflectance R and the photoelectron yield Y as well as the induced charge density permits to identify and characterize the multipole surface plasmon resonance of Al(111) appearing at ωm ∼ 0.8ωp or 11–12 eV.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
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