Anisotropic Lattice Induces High-Q Chiroptical Responses in Surface Lattice Resonance Metasurfaces

Date:25-10-2023   |   【Print】 【close

Chirality is an intrinsic property of an object that cannot coincide with its mirror image by translation or rotation. In order to realize strong chiral light-matter interactions, which are usually weak in natural materials for practical applications, artificial sub-wavelength structures such as metamaterials, metasurfaces, and plasmonic nanostructures have attracted growing attentions. In many applications of chiral nanophotonics, such as biochemical chiral sensing, chiral emission or lasing, and chiral nonlinear responses, strong optical chirality simultaneously with high Q factors are highly desirable but are challenging to achieve.  

A research group led by Dr. LI Guangyuan from the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences experimentally demonstrated that, anisotropic lattice could induce strong chirality in metasurfaces. In silicon metasurface, planar chiral mode with circular dichroism 0.37 and Q factor 1220 was experimentally observed under normal incidence by breaking the periodic symmetry. The measured Q factor is several times of that of planar bound states continuum (BIC) metasurfaces. 

This work was published in Laser & Photonics Reviews on 10 September, 2023. 

Although chiral BIC is a promising way to improve the Q factor, inherent contradictory dependencies on asymmetry parameter of high Q factor and strong chirality, restricts further improvements and hinders the applications. The group has devoted themselves to this area for years, and found that surface lattice resonances (SLRs) is an effective way to compromise the conflict. SLRs, originating from coherent coupling between localized resonances and the Rayleigh anomaly, possesses great spectral tunability and ability of suppressing the absorption and radiation losses.  

By merely breaking the periodic symmetry in x- and y-direction while keeping the mirror symmetry of the nanostructures, strong planar chirality can be produced under normal incidence without deteriorating the Q factor. The maximum simulated CD reaches 0.86 while the Q factor can be as high as 1700. The sign of CD value is inversible by setting the lattice period in the x direction larger or smaller than that in the y direction. Additionally, extrinsic chirality is also observed under oblique incidence, and large CD of 0.7 and simultaneously high Q factor of 872 can be numerically obtained. 

"We expect this high-Q and strong chiroptical metasurface will find applications in chiral sensing and wavefront modulations," said Dr. LI. 

High-Q and strong chiroptical responses are inversible by adjusting one lattice period. (Image by SIAT) 

Media Contact:
ZHANG Xiaomin
Email:xm.zhang@siat.ac.cn