Abstract

Recent advances in the fabrication of nanostructures and nanoscale features in metasurfaces offer new prospects for generating visible light emission from low-energy electrons. Here we present the experimental observation of visible light emission from low-energy free electrons interacting with nanoscale periodic surfaces through the Smith–Purcell (SP) effect. We demonstrate SP light emission from nanoscale gratings with periodicity as small as 50 nm, enabling the observation of tunable visible radiation from low-energy electrons (1.5 to 6 keV), an order of magnitude lower in energy than previously reported. We study the emission wavelength and intensity dependence on the grating pitch and electron energy, showing agreement between experiment and theory. Our results open the way to the production of SP-based nanophotonics integrated devices. Built inside electron microscopes, SP sources could enable the development of novel electron–optical correlated spectroscopic techniques and facilitate the observatio...

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