Metamaterial Step Into the Light.
A silver-and-glass nanofishnet brings the weird optics of
metamaterials into the range of light we can see.
Scientists in have constructed what may be the first practical (click) meta-material that manipulates visible light. The researchers, who predict it
could be used for sub-pico-second optical switches and finely controlled laser
pulses, reported the results at the March meeting of the American Physical
Society. The layered structure of the material, in contrast to the makeup of
earlier visible-light devices, means it can conceivably be built up into a
usable, full-size object.
Metamaterials are engineered to interact with light in unnatural
ways. Most metamaterials are constructed of repeating features that interact
with electromagnetic waves to give the material both a negative electric
permittivity and a negative magnetic permeability. Electric permittivity is a
measure of how resistant a material is to electric fields forming within it;
the higher the permittivity, the smaller the electric field that forms per unit
of charge. Magnetic permeability is similar, but the higher a material’s
permeability is, the larger the magnetic field it can support. Materials with
both negative permittivity and permeability have a negative index of
refraction, so they bend light the wrong way.
These metamaterials, for the most part, don’t let much light
through in the visible spectrum. Visible light waves dwindle to nothing after
passing through material a fraction of a wavelength thick. But a unique
manufacturing technique lets a small piece of the spectrum pass through the new
metamaterial.
The researchers, led by Carlos Garcia-Meca and based at the Valencia Nanophotonics
Technology Center and King’s College London, laid down alternating 15- to
35-nanometer-thick layers of silver and hydrogen silsesquioxane (a type of
glass). They then etched rectangular holes through the layers with a focused
ion beam to make a structure that looks something like a fishnet. This
“nanofishnet” structure has become a standard arrangement in metamaterials,
with each hole acting as an artificial atom. But Garcia-Meca says his group’s
nanofishnet has two unprecedented features: its multilayer composition and its
use of second-order magnetic resonance to create negative magnetic permeability
for red and near-infrared light. To understand the concept of resonance, think
of a guitar string. Its pitch correlates to the fundamental vibration of the
string—the note that exactly fits its wavelength on the length of that string.
But a guitar string produces more than just that frequency. It makes a complex
sound with multiple resonances, each a whole number of half wavelengths.
The fishnet metamaterial is more complex than a guitar string,
because it is two-dimensional, but the same idea holds. The researchers tuned
their material so that the second-order magnetic resonance, which vibrates
along the diagonal between the holes in the nanofishnet, is much stronger than
the first-order resonance for red and infrared light. That difference creates
the negative magnetic permeability for wavelengths in those parts of the
spectrum. Combined with silver, which naturally has a negative electric permittivity,
the negative permeability gives rise to a low-loss negative index of
refraction.
The group was able to
adjust the material’s index of refraction simply by varying the size of the
holes in the fishnet. One version they produced had a negative index (and
therefore low loss) for wavelengths from 620 to 713 nm; a second version had a
negative index at wavelengths from 694 to 806 nm.
Garcia-Meca’s group “got the negative index, with a good figure of
merit,” saysCostas Soukoulis, a
physicist at Ames Laboratory at Iowa State University who was not involved in
the research. In visible wavelengths, Soukoulis says, this is unique. “But some
people don’t believe it,” he says, because of the indirect way the team
measured the negative refractive index. “[The skeptics] want to see a wedge
experiment at optical wavelengths,” says Soukoulis, referring to the classic
experiment in which a wedge of material bends light. A wedge would give an
easily observed negative index of refraction, and Soukoulis’s own team is now
trying to produce just such a wedge of metamaterial.
The new material’s formulation also takes advantage of the fact
that the more layers it contains, the better the resonance and the less lossy
it gets. The thickest piece of silver-and-glass metamaterial Garcia-Meca’s team
has made so far has eight layers. Garcia-Meca says their technique can make a
material 15 to 20 layers thick, totaling about 450 nm. But each layer needs to
be precisely engineered. New manufacturing techniques will be required to make
bulkier versions.
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