PhD (M/F) : Modelling non-linear photoluminescence in 2D plasmonic cavities

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Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne

DIJON • Côte-d'Or

  • FTC PhD student / Offer for thesis
  • 36 mounth
  • BAC+5

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Offer at a glance

The Unit

Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne

Contract Type

FTC PhD student / Offer for thesis

Working hHours

Full Time

Workplace

21078 DIJON

Contract Duration

36 mounth

Date of Hire

01/09/2026

Remuneration

2300 € gross monthly

Apply Application Deadline : 20 April 2026 23:59

Job Description

Thesis Subject

Metal nanostructures support so-called surface plasmons polaritons (SP), coupling collective oscillations of the free electrons of the metal (plasmon) to an electromagnetic wave (polariton). SP enables strong subwavelength confinement of energy, which is of great interest for compact on-chip all-optical devices.
We are developing SP-based ALUs (arithmetic and logic units) that perform chosen complex Boolean functions (AND, OR, XOR, etc. logic gates). These are smaller and potentially largely faster than electronics microprocessors. Recently, we have implemented an all 2-bit logic gates and a 1-bit full adder on a single reconfigurable plasmonic structure [1,2] and are currently working on finding optimal configurations. The Boolean information inputs are carried by the polarization of an infra-red pulse which are processed by the SP modes towards the output ports where they are converted into Boolean output signals encoded in the non-linear photoluminescence (NPL) response. To model this complex process, we performed numerical simulations of the linear near-field plasmonic transmittance response and a phenomenological model for conversion from near-field to NPL maps (see Fig. 3 and Supp. Info of ref. [2]). Although this permits a qualitative interpretation of the measured NPL images, a more quantitative model is needed to accurately compute the non-linear transmittance of the plasmonics ALUs. Moreover, this will help to develop with our partner (CIAD lab, Dijon) a composite artificial intelligence, which combines physics-informed machine learning with domain ontologies and evolutionary strategies. This will allow a realistic optimization procedure and expanding our approach to more complex all-optical computing units.

Photoluminescence from noble metals is a well-known phenomenon but its generation mechanism, especially pulsed excitation, has been debated [3,4]. Significant progress has been obtained recently in the theoretical understanding of light emission from metals, mainly for uniform excitation and in the continuous regime [5-9]. Specifically, a formula was established for the emission probability of an excited electron in the metal. The formula requires only knowledge of the local electric field and the electron temperature. Heuristic extension of NPL modelling from continuous to pulsed laser is generally done considering a quasi-stationary approximation with a time dependent electron distribution. To predict more accurately the non-linear light emission from the ALU cavities and to extend it to scenarios of non-uniform excitation of the plasmonic system, we will extend the analytic approach from the steady-state (CW illumination) to the transient case (pulsed illumination) by tracking the dynamics of the electron distribution, the field and electron temperature for each excitation pulse intensity and duration. We will also combine the knowledge on the transport properties of the non-thermal electrons to account for the delocalized nature of the emission observed experimentally.

References
[1] Interconnect-free Multibit Arithmetic and Logic Unit in a Single Reconfigurable 3 µm2 Plasmonic Cavity,
Kumar et al, ACS Nano 15, 13351 (2021)
[2] Compact implementation of a 1-Bit Adder by Coherent 2-Beam Excitation of a single Plasmonic Cavity,
Dell'Ova et al, ACS Photonics 11, 752 (2024)
[3] Dynamics, Efficiency, and Energy Distribution of Nonlinear Plasmon-Assisted Generation of Hot Carriers.
Demichel et al, ACS Photonics 3, 791−795 (2016)
[4] Spatial Distribution of the Nonlinear Photoluminescence in Au Nanowires,
Agreda et al, ACS Photonics 6, 1240 (2019)
[5] “Hot” electrons in metallic nanosctructures – non-thermal carriers or heating ?
Y. Sivan,Y. Dubi, Light Science & Applications 8, 89 (2019)
[6] Theory of “Hot” Photoluminescence from Drude Metals,
Y. Sivan,Y. Dubi, ACS Nano 15, 8724−8732 (2021)
[7] Nonlinear Photoluminescence in Gold Thin Films
Rodriguez-Echarri et al, ACS Photonics 10, 2918-2929 (2023)
[8]Theory of photoluminescence by metallic structures
A. Loirette-Pelous, J.-J. Greffet, ACS 18, 31823 (2024)
[9] Photoluminescence from Metal Nanostructures: Dependence on Size
I. Kalyan, I-W. Un, G. Rosolen, N. Shitrit, and Y. Sivan, ACS Nano 19, 29181−29194 (2025)

Your Work Environment

The Interdisciplinary Carnot Laboratory (ICB) is a Joint Research Unit between the CNRS and the University Bourgogne Europe. This research will be conducted at the Dijon campus.
This PhD thesis is part of the CAIPOP (Composite AI for bluePrinting Optical Processors) project funded by the French National Research Agency (ANR).

Compensation and benefits

Compensation

2300 € gross monthly

Annual leave and RTT

44 jours

Remote Working practice and compensation

Pratique et indemnisation du TT

Transport

Prise en charge à 75% du coût et forfait mobilité durable jusqu’à 300€

About the offer

Offer reference UMR6303-GERCOL-004
CN Section(s) / Research Area Micro and nanotechnologies, micro and nanosystems, photonics, electronics, electromagnetism, electrical energy

About the CNRS

The CNRS is a major player in fundamental research on a global scale. The CNRS is the only French organization active in all scientific fields. Its unique position as a multi-specialist allows it to bring together different disciplines to address the most important challenges of the contemporary world, in connection with the actors of change.

CNRS

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PhD (M/F) : Modelling non-linear photoluminescence in 2D plasmonic cavities

FTC PhD student / Offer for thesis • 36 mounth • BAC+5 • DIJON

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