Scattering-free plasmonic Brewster effect via metasurfaces
The Brewster effect, dating back to the pioneering work of Sir David Brewster in 1815, offers a crucial route to achieve 100% energy conversion between the incident and transmitted propagating waves at an optical interface and is of fundamental importance to many practical applications, such as pola...
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Zusammenfassung: | The Brewster effect, dating back to the pioneering work of Sir David Brewster
in 1815, offers a crucial route to achieve 100% energy conversion between the
incident and transmitted propagating waves at an optical interface and is of
fundamental importance to many practical applications, such as polarization
filtering, beam steering, and optical broadband angular selectivity. However,
whether the Brewster effect of surface waves can be implemented without the
involvement of negative-permittivity or negative-permeability materials remains
elusive. This is due to the formidable challenge to fully suppress both the
parasitic scattering into propagating waves and the reflection into surface
waves under the incidence of surface waves. Here, we reveal a feasible route to
achieve scattering-free plasmonic Brewster effect via isotropic metasurfaces,
along with the usage of positive-permittivity and positive-permeability
metamaterials with both anisotropic and magnetic responses. In essence, the
anisotropic response of metamaterials is judiciously designed to fully suppress
the parasitic scattering into propagating waves, while the magnetic response of
metamaterials facilitates the full suppression of the reflection into surface
waves supported by metasurfaces. Moreover, we find that this plasmonic Brewster
effect via metasurfaces can be further engineered to occur for arbitrary
incident angles, giving rise to the exotic phenomenon of all-angle
scattering-free plasmonic Brewster effect. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.08455 |