English

Inverse-designed metaphotonics for hypersensitive detection

Optics 2022-02-15 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

Controlling the flow of broadband electromagnetic energy at the nanoscale remains a critical challenge in optoelectronics. Surface plasmon polaritons (or plasmons) provide subwavelength localization of light, but are affected by significant losses. On the contrary, dielectrics lack a sufficiently robust response in the visible to trap photons similar to metallic structures. Overcoming these limitations appears elusive, as it implies devising a path to circumvent causality in the quantum-mechanical form of matter. Here we demonstrate that addressing this problem is possible if we employ a novel approach based on suitably deformed reflective metaphotonic structures. The complex geometrical shape engineered in these reflectors emulates nondispersive index responses, which can be inverse-designed following arbitrary form factors. We discuss the realization of essential components such as resonators with an ultra-high refractive index of n=100n=100 in diverse profiles. These structures support localization of light in the form of bound states in the continuum (BIC), fully localized in air, in a platform in which all refractive index regions are physically accessible. We discuss our approach to sensing applications, designing a class of sensors where the analyte directly contacts areas of ultra-high refractive index. Leveraging this feature, we report differential sensitivities up to 350350~nm/RIU in structures with footprints of approximately one micron. These performances are two times better than the closest competitor with a similar form factor. Inversely designed reflective metaphotonics offers a flexible technology for controlling broadband light, supporting optoelectronics' integration with large bandwidths in circuitry with miniaturized footprints.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2202.06699,
  title  = {Inverse-designed metaphotonics for hypersensitive detection},
  author = {Maxim S. Elizarov and Yuri S. Kivshar and A. Fratalocchi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2202.06699},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

24 pages, 6 figures, submitted

R2 v1 2026-06-24T09:35:13.998Z