Abstract
Using spatially resolved Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy, we investigate the excitation of long-wavelength surface optical vibrational modes in elementary types of nanostructures: an amorphous SiO2 slab, an MgO cube, and in the composite cube/slab system. We find rich sets of optical vibrational modes strongly constrained by the nanoscale size and geometry. For slabs, we find two surface resonances resulting from the excitation of surface phonon polariton modes. For cubes, we obtain three main highly localized corner, edge, and face resonances. The response of those surface phonon resonances can be described in terms of eigenmodes of the cube and we show that the corresponding mode pattern is recovered in the spatially resolved EELS maps. For the composite cube/substrate system we find that interactions between the two basic structures are weak, producing minor spectral shifts and intensity variations (transparency behaviour), particularly for the MgO-derived modes.
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