posted on 2017-06-22, 00:00authored byFelix Stete, Wouter Koopman, Matias Bargheer
In
the strong coupling regime, exciton and plasmon excitations
are hybridized into combined system excitations. The correct identification
of the coupling regime in these systems is currently debated, from
both experimental and theoretical perspectives. In this article we
show that the extinction spectra may show a large peak splitting,
although the energy loss encoded in the absorption spectra clearly
rules out the strong coupling regime. We investigate the coupling
of J-aggregate excitons to the localized surface
plasmon polaritons on gold nanospheres and nanorods by fine-tuning
the plasmon resonance via layer-by-layer deposition of polyelectrolytes.
While both structures show a characteristic anticrossing in extinction
and scattering experiments, the careful assessment of the systems’
light absorption reveals that strong coupling of the plasmon to the
exciton is not present in the nanosphere system. In a phenomenological
model of two classical coupled oscillators, a Fano-like regime causes
only the resonance of the light-driven oscillator to split up, while
the other one still dissipates energy at its original frequency. Only
in the strong-coupling limit do both oscillators split up the frequencies
at which they dissipate energy, qualitatively explaining our experimental
finding.