Publications by authors named "Kivshar Y"

We demonstrate that chiral response can be achieved in resonant metasurfaces with a monoclinic lattice symmetry (the so-called Bravais oblique lattices) where the mirror symmetry is broken by the lattice asymmetry and also by a substrate, whereas each individual meta-atom remains fully achiral. We describe the underlying physics by introducing a mode chirality parameter as a quantitative measure of the lattice chiral eigenmodes. We confirm experimentally selective linear and nonlinear chiral interaction of resonant silicon metasurfaces with circularly polarized light.

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  • Bound states in the continuum (BICs) are localized modes within radiation continuum, first predicted for single particles but now general in many wave systems; their application in many-body quantum physics is still largely unexplored.
  • Researchers predict a new type of multiparticle state in the Bose-Hubbard model, creating a quasi-BIC that behaves differently under various boundary conditions—appearing as a bound pair influenced by a third particle.
  • The study reveals that modulating onsite interactions can realize Thouless pumping of these quasi-BICs, where the overall center of mass shifts while the bound pair moves oppositely in relation to a standing wave.
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  • The text discusses the role of resonant metasurfaces in enhancing electromagnetic functions, particularly through bound states in the continuum (BICs) which improve optical properties and reduce energy loss.
  • It introduces a new concept of chiral dielectric BIC metasurfaces that provide strong resonant features while allowing control over the polarization of emitted light.
  • The study presents a designed chiral metallic metasurface operating in the microwave range, showcasing unique properties like significant circular dichroism by manipulating the meta-atom's symmetry.
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The physics of bound states in the continuum (BICs) allows the design and demonstration of optical resonant structures with large values of the quality factor (Q factor) by employing dielectric structures with low losses. However, BIC is a general wave phenomenon that should be observed in many systems, including the metal-dielectric structures supporting surface plasmon polaritons where optical resonances are hindered by losses. Here we suggest and develop a comprehensive strategy to achieve high-Q resonances in plasmonic metasurfaces by effectively tailoring the resonant modes from local to nonlocal regimes, thus transitioning from quasi-isolated localized resonances to extended resonant modes involving strong interaction among neighboring structure metaunits.

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Nonlinear chiral photonics explores the nonlinear response of chiral structures, and it offers a pathway to novel optical functionalities not accessible through linear or achiral systems. Here we present the first application of nanostructured van der Waals materials to nonlinear chiral photonics. We demonstrate the 3 orders of magnitude enhancement of the third-harmonic generation from hBN metasurfaces driven by quasi-bound states in the continuum and accompanied by strong nonlinear circular dichroism at the resonances.

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  • Chiral nanostructures can enhance optical responses, but their design often depends on trial-and-error or complex simulations; a clear strategy has been elusive.
  • This study proposes a new microscopic theory highlighting the importance of reactive helicity density for achieving maximum chirality in resonant nanostructures.
  • The research demonstrates this concept using planar photonic crystals and metasurfaces, providing a framework for creating highly chiral photonic structures, which could advance technologies in chiral sensing and quantum optics.
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We study, both theoretically and experimentally, strong interaction between a quasi-bound state in the continuum (QBIC) supported by a resonant metasurface with an epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) guided mode excited in an ultrathin ITO layer. We observe and quantify the strong coupling regime of the QBIC-ENZ interaction in the hybrid metasurface manifested through the mode splitting over 200 meV. We also measure experimentally the resonant nonlinear response enhanced near the ENZ frequency and observe the effective nonlinear refractive index up to ∼4 × 10 m/W in the ITO-integrated dielectric nanoresonators, which provides a promising platform for low-power nonlinear photonic devices.

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Optical nonreciprocity is manifested as a difference in the transmission of light for the opposite directions of excitation. Nonreciprocal optics is traditionally realized with relatively bulky components such as optical isolators based on the Faraday rotation, hindering the miniaturization and integration of optical systems. Here we demonstrate free-space nonreciprocal transmission through a metasurface comprised of a two-dimensional array of nanoresonators made of silicon hybridized with vanadium dioxide (VO).

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Dynamic control of circular dichroism in photonic structures is critically important for compact spectrometers, stereoscopic displays, and information processing exploiting multiple degrees of freedom. Metasurfaces can help miniaturize chiral devices but only produce static and limited chiral responses. While external stimuli can tune resonances, their modulations are often weak, and reversing continuously the sign of circular dichroism is extremely challenging.

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Discover how breakthroughs in metamaterials can reshape ocean engineering, creating water mirages with the help of carefully designed obstacles.

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  • Light has intrinsic properties like intensity, polarization, and wavelength that are crucial for various applications, but accurately measuring all these characteristics together is difficult.
  • This study presents a method using thin-film interfaces that can analyze multiple light properties simultaneously through a combination of spatial and frequency dispersion.
  • The new approach allows for comprehensive light characterization using a single device and measurement, outperforming traditional polarimeters and spectrometers, and can easily integrate into existing imaging systems.
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We study numerically nonlinear dynamics of several types of molecular systems composed of hydrogen-bonded chains placed inside carbon nanotubes with open edges. We demonstrate that carbon nanotubes provide a stabilization mechanism for quasi-one-dimensional molecular chains via the formation of their secondary structures. In particular, a polypeptide chain (Gly)N placed inside a carbon nanotube can form a stable helical chain (310-, α-, π-, and β-helix) with parallel chains of hydrogen-bonded peptide groups.

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  • Researchers address the need for better control of light's angular momentum at the nanoscale, which is important for advanced optical technologies like high-speed communication and imaging.
  • They propose a new method for generating optical vortices that is more efficient and smaller in size than traditional techniques, which often struggle with low efficiency and larger device sizes.
  • Their innovative use of adjacent nanopillars in a meta-quadrumer allows for precise manipulation of light intensity and phase, leading to effective creation of various optical vortices and enabling applications in vortex beam arrays and information encryption.
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Metasurfaces have recently risen to prominence in optical research, providing unique functionalities that can be used for imaging, beam forming, holography, polarimetry, and many more, while keeping device dimensions small. Despite the fact that a vast range of basic metasurface designs has already been thoroughly studied in the literature, the number of metasurface-related papers is still growing at a rapid pace, as metasurface research is now spreading to adjacent fields, including computational imaging, augmented and virtual reality, automotive, display, biosensing, nonlinear, quantum and topological optics, optical computing, and more. At the same time, the ability of metasurfaces to perform optical functions in much more compact optical systems has triggered strong and constantly growing interest from various industries that greatly benefit from the availability of miniaturized, highly functional, and efficient optical components that can be integrated in optoelectronic systems at low cost.

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Surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRA) has emerged as a powerful technique for ultrasensitive chemical-specific analysis. SEIRA can be realized by employing metasurfaces that can enhance light-matter interactions in the spectral bands of molecular vibrations. Increasing sample complexity emphasizes the need for metasurfaces that can operate simultaneously at different spectral bands, both accessing rich spectral information over a broad band, and resolving subtle differences in the absorption fingerprints through narrow-band resonances.

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Meta-atoms are the building blocks of metamaterials, which are employed to control both generation and propagation of light as well as provide novel functionalities of localization and directivity of electromagnetic radiation. In many cases, simple dielectric or metallic resonators are employed as meta-atoms to create different types of electromagnetic metamaterials. Here, we fabricate and study composed of coupled perovskite quantum dots.

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We introduce the concept of photonic flatband resonances and demonstrate it for an array of high-index dielectric particles. We employ the multiple Mie scattering theory and demonstrate that both short- and long-range interactions between the resonators are crucial for the emerging collective resonances and their associated photonic flatbands. By examining both near- and far-field characteristics, we uncover how the flatbands emerge due to a fine tuning of resonators' radiation fields, and predict that hybridization of a flatband resonance with an electric hot spot can lead to giant values of the Purcell factor for the electric dipolar emitters.

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We employ the molecular dynamics simulations to study the dynamics of acetanilide (ACN) molecules placed on a flat surface of planar multilayer hexagonal boron nitride. We demonstrate that the ACN molecules, known to be achiral in the three-dimensional space, become chiral after being placed on the substrate. Homochirality of the ACN molecules leads to stable secondary structures stabilized by hydrogen bonds between peptide groups of the molecules.

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High-index dielectric subwavelength structures and metasurfaces are capable of enhancing light-matter interaction by orders of magnitude via geometry-dependent optical resonances. This enhancement, however, comes with a fundamental limitation of a narrow spectral range of operation in the vicinity of one or few resonant frequencies. Here, this limitation is tackled by introducing an innovative and practical approach to achieve spectrally tunable enhancement of light-matter interaction with resonant metasurfaces.

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  • The text discusses a new method of compact angle-resolved spectral imaging using a small spectrometer array combined with a metalens, enabling better analysis of light from materials.
  • This innovative approach achieves impressive accuracy and resolution metrics, including a wavelength accuracy of 0.17 nm and a spectral resolution of 0.4 nm, all within a tiny footprint of 4×4 μm.
  • The resulting spectrometer has a very low detection limit and high dynamic range, making it useful for advanced optical imaging and spectral analysis beyond traditional lab settings.
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The realization of lossless metasurfaces with true chirality crucially requires the fabrication of three-dimensional structures, constraining experimental feasibility and hampering practical implementations. Even though the three-dimensional assembly of metallic nanostructures has been demonstrated previously, the resulting plasmonic resonances suffer from high intrinsic and radiative losses. The concept of photonic bound states in the continuum (BICs) is instrumental for tailoring radiative losses in diverse geometries, especially when implemented using lossless dielectrics, but applications have so far been limited to planar structures.

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We introduce a new paradigm for generating high-purity vortex beams with metasurfaces. By applying optical neural networks to a system of cascaded phase-only metasurfaces, we demonstrate the efficient generation of high-quality Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) vortex modes. Our approach is based on two metasurfaces where one metasurface redistributes the intensity profile of light in accord with Rayleigh-Sommerfeld diffraction rules, and then the second metasurface matches the required phases for the vortex beams.

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Topological phases play a crucial role in the fundamental physics of light-matter interaction and emerging applications of quantum technologies. However, the topological band theory of waveguide QED systems is known to break down, because the energy bands become disconnected. Here, we introduce a concept of the inverse energy band and explore analytically topological scattering in a waveguide with an array of quantum emitters.

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  • The study explores Mie-like scattering from subwavelength resonators made of high-index dielectric materials, focusing on conditions of interference in resonant modes.
  • A new phenomenon called superscattering is discovered, which is linked to strong coupling of resonant modes and involves bound states in the continuum (BICs).
  • The research includes a theoretical framework using a non-Hermitian model and experimental validation in microwaves, highlighting potential advancements for metadevices in enhancing scattering.
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