Scientific Reports (Dec 2021)
Surface-enhanced mid-infrared absorption spectroscopy using miniaturized-disc metasurface
Abstract
Abstract Surface-enhanced infrared spectroscopy is an important technique for improving the signal-to-noise ratio of spectroscopic material identification measurements in the mid-infrared fingerprinting region. However, the lower bound of the fingerprinting region receives much less attention due to a scarcity of transparent materials, more expensive sources, and weaker plasmonic effects. In this paper, we present a miniaturized metasurface unit cell for surface-enhanced infrared spectroscopy of the 15- $$\upmu$$ μ m vibrational band of CO $$_{2}$$ 2 . The unit cell consists of a gold disc, patterned along the edge with fine gaps/wires to create a resonant metamaterial liner. In simulation, our plasmonic metamaterial-lined disc achieves greater than $$4\times$$ 4 × the average field intensity enhancement of a comparable dipole array and a miniaturized size of $$\lambda _0/5$$ λ 0 / 5 using complex, 100-nm features that are patterned using 100-kV electron-beam lithography. In a simple experiment, the metamaterial-lined disc metasurface shows a high tolerance to fabrication imperfections and enhances the absorption of CO $$_{2}$$ 2 at 15 $$\upmu$$ μ m. The resonant wavelength and reflection magnitude can be tuned over a wide range by adjusting the liner feature sizes and the metasurface array pitch to target other vibrational bands. This work is a step toward low-cost, more compact on-chip integrated gas sensors.