Broadband nanoprobe sharpens optical imaging
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Broadband nanoprobe sharpens optical imaging

01.04.2026 TranSpread

Surface plasmon polaritons can squeeze light far below the diffraction limit, making them attractive for super-resolution imaging, sensing, spectroscopy, and nanoscale detection. Yet conventional plasmonic probes often depend on radially polarized light, which is difficult to generate and sensitive to alignment errors. They also struggle with propagation loss, limited field enhancement at the probe tip, and inconsistent fabrication of ultra-small, well-controlled tip structures. These limitations reduce signal quality and weaken practical performance, especially in broadband or short-wavelength applications. Based on these challenges, in-depth research was needed to develop a simpler, stronger, and more fabrication-tolerant nanofocusing probe.

Researchers at Xi’an Jiaotong University reported (DOI: 10.1038/s41378-026-01197-1) the advance in Microsystems & Nanoengineering in 2026. The team developed a double-slit plasmonic platform-based fiber probe that works with linearly polarized light, recycles optical energy through Fabry–Pérot interference, and produces high-intensity nanofocusing at the probe tip. The study addresses a core obstacle in nanoscale optical imaging: how to combine easier excitation, stronger signal enhancement, broadband performance, and ultra-high resolution in one practical probe architecture.

The new probe, called DSPP, merges two functions into one structure. Second, a platform-like reflective surface sends part of the plasmon energy back toward the tip, where it interferes constructively and intensifies the local field. Using a focused ion beam-based sleeve-ring etching strategy, the team precisely shaped the front cone and produced a tip radius of about 15 nm, while improving tip curvature by more than an order of magnitude over conventional fabrication. Simulations and experiments showed that at 633 nm, the electric field strength at the DSPP tip was about six times that of a related asymmetric double-slit probe. The device also maintained stable nanofocusing from 580 to 800 nm, with especially strong gains at shorter wavelengths where losses are usually more severe. In optical imaging tests, it resolved a slit measuring 28.6 nm, closely matching atomic force microscopy results of 28.2 nm, while conventional confocal microscopy only produced a blurred outline.

According to the authors, the strength of the design lies not in one isolated improvement, but in the combination of easier light excitation, stronger tip enhancement, broadband stability, and controllable fabrication. Their results suggest that the probe can simultaneously capture morphological and optical information from deep-subwavelength structures, making it more than just a sharper imaging tip. It may serve as a versatile nano-optical tool for laboratories that need both resolution and signal reliability under practical, ambient working conditions.

The implications extend well beyond a single imaging experiment. Because the probe offers intense localized fields, broadband adaptability, and a compact fiber-based format, it could support high-sensitivity single-molecule detection, nanoscale spectroscopy, biological cell studies, subwavelength lithography, and optical chip defect inspection. Just as importantly, the fabrication approach introduces greater structural control, which may help move advanced plasmonic probes from proof-of-concept devices toward more standardized manufacturing. In that sense, the study points to a future in which nano-optical imaging becomes not only sharper, but also more robust, scalable, and easier to deploy.

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References

DOI

10.1038/s41378-026-01197-1

Origianl Source URL

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-026-01197-1

Funding information

This work was supported by the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars (52225507), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (U23B6005), the Key Research and Development Program of Shaanxi Province (2024PT-ZCK-40), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities.

About Microsystems & Nanoengineering

Microsystems & Nanoengineering is an online-only, open access international journal devoted to publishing original research results and reviews on all aspects of Micro and Nano Electro Mechanical Systems from fundamental to applied research. The journal is published by Springer Nature in partnership with the Aerospace Information Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, supported by the State Key Laboratory of Transducer Technology.

Paper title: Broadband plasmon modulation and high-intensity nanofocusing for high-resolution nanoscale imaging using Fabry–Pérot probes
Angehängte Dokumente
  • Plasmonic Fiber Probe Enables Sharper Nanoimaging. This schematic illustrates the double-slit plasmonic platform-based fiber probe developed for broadband, high-intensity nanofocusing and high-resolution optical imaging. By combining phase interference and plasmonic field confinement, the probe enhances light concentration at the tip and enables nanoscale imaging with resolution beyond the diffraction limit.
01.04.2026 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Applied science, Nanotechnology

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