Exhibition of circular Bragg phenomenon by hyperbolic, dielectric, structurally chiral materials
Abstract
The relative permittivity dyadic of a dielectric structurally chiral material (SCM) varies helicoidally along a fixed direction; in consequence, the SCM exhibits the circular Bragg phenomenon, which is the circular-polarization-selective reflection of light. The introduction of hyperbolicity in an SCM---by making either one or two but not all three eigenvalues of the relative permittivity dyadic acquire negative real parts---does not eliminate the circular Bragg phenomenon, but significantly alters the regime for its exhibition. Physical vapor deposition techniques appear to be suitable to fabricate hyperbolic SCMs.
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