Magnetic hyperbolic metasurface : concept, design, and applications

A fundamental cornerstone in nanophotonics is the ability to achieve hyperbolic dispersion of surface plasmons, which shows excellent potentials in many unique applications, such as near-field heat transport, planar hyperlens, strongly enhanced spontaneous emission, and so forth. The hyperbolic meta...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yang, Yihao, Qin, Pengfei, Zheng, Bin, Shen, Lian, Wang, Huaping, Wang, Zuojia, Li, Erping, Singh, Ranjan, Chen, Hongsheng
Other Authors: School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/86082
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48482
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:A fundamental cornerstone in nanophotonics is the ability to achieve hyperbolic dispersion of surface plasmons, which shows excellent potentials in many unique applications, such as near-field heat transport, planar hyperlens, strongly enhanced spontaneous emission, and so forth. The hyperbolic metasurfaces with such an ability, however, are currently restricted to electric hyperbolic metasurface paradigm, and realization of magnetic hyperbolic metasurfaces remains elusive despite the importance of manipulating magnetic surface plasmons (MSPs) at subwavelength scale. Here, magnetic hyperbolic metasurfaces are proposed and designed, on which diffraction-free propagation, anomalous diffraction, negative refraction, and frequencydependent strong spatial distributions of the MSPs in the hyperbolic regime are experimentally observed at microwave frequencies. The findings can be applied to manipulate MSPs and design planarized devices for near-field focusing, imaging, and spatial multiplexers. This concept is also generalizable to terahertz and optical frequencies and inspires novel quantum optical apparatuses with strong magnetic light–matter interactions.