| Literature DB >> 35055252 |
Natalya V Rudakova1,2, Rashid G Bikbaev1,2, Pavel S Pankin1,2, Stepan Ya Vetrov1,2, Ivan V Timofeev1,2, Kuo-Ping Chen3, Wei Lee3.
Abstract
This numerical study demonstrates the possibility of exciting a chiral optical Tamm state localized at the interface between a cholesteric liquid crystal and a polarization-preserving anisotropic mirror conjugated to a metasurface. The difference of the proposed structure from a fully dielectric one is that the metasurface makes it possible to decrease the number of layers of a polarization-preserving anisotropic mirror by a factor of more than two at the retained Q-factor of the localized state. It is shown that the proposed structure can be used in a vertically emitting laser.Entities:
Keywords: Q-factor; chiral optical Tamm state; coupled mode theory; polarization-preserving anisotropic mirror
Year: 2022 PMID: 35055252 PMCID: PMC8779836 DOI: 10.3390/nano12020234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Reflection spectra of the CLC–PPAM structure calculated by the Berreman (orange line) and FDTD (green line) methods. (b) Local field intensity distribution in the CLC–PPAM structure at the COTS wavelength.
Figure 2(a) Model of a hybrid structure for obtaining a high-Q COTS consisting of a CLC, PPAM, and MS (left). Schematic of the MS (right). and are the angles between the optical axes at the CLC-PPAM and PPAM-MS interfaces, respectively. (b) Reflectance spectra of the CLC–PPAM–MS structure calculated by the Berreman (orange line) and FDTD (green line) methods. (c) Local field intensity distribution at the COTS wavelength.
Figure 3The dependence of the Q-factor of the chiral optical Tamm state on the number of PPAM periods, , with and without the metasurface. The leftmost green open circle corresponds to the previous experimental result [28]. Black crosses have comparable Q-factors and correspond to Figure 2b.
Figure 4Reflectance spectra of the structure at different angles . Positive angles correspond to the clockwise rotation of a nanobrick around the z axis, and negative angles correspond to the counterclockwise rotation.
Figure 5Reflectance spectra of the structure at negative values of the imaginary part k of the CLC refractive index. In contrast to passive structures, the reflectance goes beyond unity, as it is not limited by the energy conservation law. The sharp growth of the reflectivity at indicates the lasing threshold [43].