English

Quantum nanophotonics using hyperbolic metamaterials

Optics 2013-09-24 v2 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Materials Science

Abstract

Engineering the optical properties using artificial nanostructured media known as metamaterials has led to breakthrough devices with capabilities from super-resolution imaging to invisibility. In this article, we review metamaterials for quantum nanophotonic applications, a recent development in the field. This seeks to address many challenges in the field of quantum optics using recent advances in nanophotonics and nanofabrication. We focus on the class of nanostructured media with hyperbolic dispersion that have emerged as one of the most promising metamaterials with a multitude of practical applications from subwavelength imaging, nanoscale waveguiding, biosensing to nonlinear switching. We present the various design and characterization principles of hyperbolic metamaterials and explain the most important property of such media: a broadband enhancement in the electromagnetic density of states. We review several recent experiments that have explored this phenomenon using spontaneous emission from dye molecules and quantum dots. We finally point to future applications of hyperbolic metamaterials of using the broadband enhancement in the spontaneous emission to construct single photon sources.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1204.5529,
  title  = {Quantum nanophotonics using hyperbolic metamaterials},
  author = {C. L. Cortes and W. Newman and S. Molesky and Z. Jacob},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1204.5529},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

25 pages, 12 figures, Review Article

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:54:21.214Z