Title :
A new computational method for plasmon resonances of nanoparticles and for wave propagation
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Akron Univ., OH, USA
Abstract :
Numerical simulation of electromagnetic wave propagation and scattering in nanoscale applications, and in particular photonic crystals and plasmon resonances, faces serious challenges. This paper addresses one of the computational difficulties: the treatment of material interface boundaries. Flexible local approximation methods (FLAME) employ any desired local approximating functions that are seamlessly built into the difference scheme. In particular, this new finite-difference calculus provides an accurate representation of material interfaces on geometrically nonconforming simple Cartesian grids. For instance, in the vicinity of cylindrical or spherical dielectric particles the field can be approximated by cylindrical or spherical harmonics. The new approach achieves the same level of accuracy as the finite element method with two orders of magnitude fewer unknowns.
Keywords :
approximation theory; dielectric materials; finite difference methods; light scattering; nanoparticles; photonic crystals; plasma light propagation; plasmons; Cartesian grids; cylindrical dielectric particles; electromagnetic wave propagation; finite-difference calculus; flexible local approximation methods; material interface boundaries; nanoparticles; nanoscale applications; numerical simulation; photonic crystals; plasmon resonances; scattering; spherical dielectric particles; Computer interfaces; Dielectric materials; Electromagnetic propagation; Electromagnetic scattering; Nanoparticles; Numerical simulation; Particle scattering; Photonic crystals; Plasmons; Resonance;
Conference_Titel :
Wireless Communications and Applied Computational Electromagnetics, 2005. IEEE/ACES International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9068-7
DOI :
10.1109/WCACEM.2005.1469731