Extraordinarily transparent compact metallic metamaterials

The design of achromatic optical components requires materials with high transparency and low dispersion. We show that although metals are highly opaque, densely packed arrays of metallic nanoparticles can be more transparent to infrared radiation than dielectrics such as germanium, even when the ar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-05, Vol.10 (1), p.2118-2118, Article 2118
Hauptverfasser: Palmer, Samuel J., Xiao, Xiaofei, Pazos-Perez, Nicolas, Guerrini, Luca, Correa-Duarte, Miguel A., Maier, Stefan A., Craster, Richard V., Alvarez-Puebla, Ramon A., Giannini, Vincenzo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The design of achromatic optical components requires materials with high transparency and low dispersion. We show that although metals are highly opaque, densely packed arrays of metallic nanoparticles can be more transparent to infrared radiation than dielectrics such as germanium, even when the arrays are over 75% metal by volume. Such arrays form effective dielectrics that are virtually dispersion-free over ultra-broadband ranges of wavelengths from microns up to millimeters or more. Furthermore, the local refractive indices may be tuned by altering the size, shape, and spacing of the nanoparticles, allowing the design of gradient-index lenses that guide and focus light on the microscale. The electric field is also strongly concentrated in the gaps between the metallic nanoparticles, and the simultaneous focusing and squeezing of the electric field produces strong ‘doubly-enhanced’ hotspots which could boost measurements made using infrared spectroscopy and other non-linear processes over a broad range of frequencies. Designing effective dielectrics in a broad range of the spectrum is of huge interest. Here, the authors demonstrate how transparent effective dielectrics can be constructed from dense arrays of metallic nanoparticles and can result in being more transparent than real dielectrics renowned for their transparency.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-09939-8