Overcoming Intrinsic Dispersion Locking for Achieving Spatio-Spectral Selectivity with Misaligned Bi-metagratings
Abstract
Spatio-spectral selectivity, the capability to select a single mode with a specific wavevector (angle) and wavelength, is imperative for light emission and imaging. Continuous band dispersion of a conventional periodic structure, however, sets up an intrinsic locking between wavevectors and wavelengths of photonic modes, making it difficult to single out just one mode. Here, we show that the radiation asymmetry of a photonic mode can be explored to tailor the transmission/reflection properties of a photonic structure, based on Fano interferences between the mode and the background. In particular, we find that a photonic system supporting a band dispersion with certain angle-dependent radiation-directionality can exhibit Fano-like perfect reflection at a single frequency and a single incident angle, thus overcoming the dispersion locking and enabling the desired spatio-spectral selectivity. We present a phase diagram to guide designing angle-controlled radiation-directionality and experimentally demonstrate double narrow Fano-like reflection in angular (5) and wavelength (14 nm) bandwidths, along with high-contrast spatio-spectral selective imaging, using a misaligned bilayer metagrating with tens-of-nanometer-scale thin spacer. Our scheme promises new opportunities in applications in directional thermal emission, nonlocal beam shaping, augmented reality, precision bilayer nanofabrication, and biological spectroscopy.
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