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Physics > Optics

Title: Permittivity-asymmetric quasi-bound states in the continuum

Abstract: Broken symmetries lie at the heart of nontrivial physical phenomena. Breaking the in-plane geometrical symmetry of optical systems allows to access a set of electromagnetic states termed symmetry-protected quasi-bound states in the continuum (qBICs). Here we demonstrate, theoretically, numerically and experimentally, that such optical states can also be accessed in metasurfaces by breaking the in-plane symmetry in the permittivity of the comprising materials, showing a remarkable equivalence to their geometrically-asymmetric counterparts. However, while the physical size of atoms imposes a limit on the lowest achievable geometrical asymmetry, weak permittivity modulations due to carrier doping and electro-optical Pockels and Kerr effects, usually considered insignificant, open up the possibility of infinitesimal permittivity asymmetries for on-demand, and dynamically tuneable optical resonances of extremely high quality factors. We probe the excitation of permittivity-asymmetric qBICs (${\varepsilon}$-qBICs) using a prototype Si/TiO$_{2}$ metasurface, in which the asymmetry in the unit cell is provided by the refractive index contrast of the dissimilar materials, surpassing any unwanted asymmetries from nanofabrication defects or angular deviations of light from normal incidence. ${\varepsilon}$-qBICs can also be excited in 1D gratings, where quality-factor enhancement and tailored interference phenomena via the interplay of geometrical and permittivity asymmetries are numerically demonstrated. The emergence of ${\varepsilon}$-qBICs in systems with broken symmetries in their permittivity may enable to test time-energy uncertainties in quantum mechanics, and lead to a whole new class of low-footprint optical and optoelectronic devices, from arbitrarily narrow filters and topological sources, biosensing and ultrastrong light-matter interaction platforms, to tuneable optical switches.
Comments: Manuscript and Supplementary Information, 27 pages, 4 Figures manuscript + 4 Supplementary Figures
Subjects: Optics (physics.optics); Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c05021
Cite as: arXiv:2211.01176 [physics.optics]
  (or arXiv:2211.01176v1 [physics.optics] for this version)

Submission history

From: Rodrigo Berté Dr. [view email]
[v1] Wed, 2 Nov 2022 14:52:37 GMT (3785kb)

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