Manipulating Bloch surface waves in 2D: a platform concept-based flat lens

At the end of the 1970s, it was confirmed that dielectric multilayers can sustain Bloch surface waves (BSWs). However, BSWs were not widely studied until more recently. Taking advantage of their high-quality factor, sensing applications have focused on BSWs. Thus far, no work has been performed to m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Light, science & applications science & applications, 2014-01, Vol.3 (1), p.e124-e124
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Libo, Barakat, Elsie, Sfez, Tristan, Hvozdara, Lubos, Di Francesco, Joab, Peter Herzig, Hans
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creator Yu, Libo
Barakat, Elsie
Sfez, Tristan
Hvozdara, Lubos
Di Francesco, Joab
Peter Herzig, Hans
description At the end of the 1970s, it was confirmed that dielectric multilayers can sustain Bloch surface waves (BSWs). However, BSWs were not widely studied until more recently. Taking advantage of their high-quality factor, sensing applications have focused on BSWs. Thus far, no work has been performed to manipulate and control the natural surface propagations in terms of defined functions with two-dimensional (2D) components, targeting the realization of a 2D system. In this study, we demonstrate that 2D photonic components can be implemented by coating an in-plane shaped ultrathin (∼λ/15) polymer layer on the dielectric multilayer. The presence of the polymer modifies the local effective refractive index, enabling direct manipulation of the BSW. By locally shaping the geometries of the 2D components, the BSW can be deflected, diffracted, focused and coupled with 2D freedom. Enabling BSW manipulation in 2D, the dielectric multilayer can play a new role as a robust platform for 2D optics, which can pave the way for integration in photonic chips. Multiheterodyne near-field measurements are used to study light propagation through micro- and nano-optical components. We demonstrate that a lens-shaped polymer layer can be considered as a 2D component based on the agreement between near-field measurements and theoretical calculations. Both the focal shift and the resolution of a 2D BSW lens are measured for the first time. The proposed platform enables the design of 2D all-optical integrated systems, which have numerous potential applications, including molecular sensing and photonic circuits. Surface waves: flat photonic circuits Controlling Bloch surface waves in a multilayer dielectric yields a new platform for creating two-dimensional photonic circuitry. Libo Yu and co-workers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne used an ultrathin ( λ /15) polymer coating to modify the local effective refractive index of a dielectric multilayer stack that guides Bloch surface waves. Careful design of the shape of a polymer layer makes it possible to deflect, diffract and focus the waves within a planar geometry. The researchers used this approach to construct a flat lens capable of operating at a wavelength of 1.5 µm, and used a multiheterodyne scanning near-field optical microscope to observe the near-field behavior of the platform. They say that many other forms of photonic component should be possible.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/lsa.2014.5
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However, BSWs were not widely studied until more recently. Taking advantage of their high-quality factor, sensing applications have focused on BSWs. Thus far, no work has been performed to manipulate and control the natural surface propagations in terms of defined functions with two-dimensional (2D) components, targeting the realization of a 2D system. In this study, we demonstrate that 2D photonic components can be implemented by coating an in-plane shaped ultrathin (∼λ/15) polymer layer on the dielectric multilayer. The presence of the polymer modifies the local effective refractive index, enabling direct manipulation of the BSW. By locally shaping the geometries of the 2D components, the BSW can be deflected, diffracted, focused and coupled with 2D freedom. Enabling BSW manipulation in 2D, the dielectric multilayer can play a new role as a robust platform for 2D optics, which can pave the way for integration in photonic chips. Multiheterodyne near-field measurements are used to study light propagation through micro- and nano-optical components. We demonstrate that a lens-shaped polymer layer can be considered as a 2D component based on the agreement between near-field measurements and theoretical calculations. Both the focal shift and the resolution of a 2D BSW lens are measured for the first time. The proposed platform enables the design of 2D all-optical integrated systems, which have numerous potential applications, including molecular sensing and photonic circuits. Surface waves: flat photonic circuits Controlling Bloch surface waves in a multilayer dielectric yields a new platform for creating two-dimensional photonic circuitry. Libo Yu and co-workers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne used an ultrathin ( λ /15) polymer coating to modify the local effective refractive index of a dielectric multilayer stack that guides Bloch surface waves. 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subjects 639/624/1107/1110
639/624/400/1021
Applied and Technical Physics
Atomic
Classical and Continuum Physics
Dielectrics
Lasers
Lenses
Molecular
Multilayers
Optical and Plasma Physics
Optical Devices
Optics
original-article
Photonics
Physics
Physics and Astronomy
Platforms
Propagation (polymerization)
Surface waves
Two dimensional
title Manipulating Bloch surface waves in 2D: a platform concept-based flat lens
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