Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures

Designing photonic-plasmonic nanostructures with desirable electromagnetic properties is a central problem in modern photonics engineering. As limited by available materials, engineering geometry of optical materials at both element and array levels becomes the key to solve this problem. In this the...

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Main Author: Wang, Ren
Other Authors: Dal Negro, Luca
Language:en_US
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/30730
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-307302019-12-22T15:11:45Z Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures Wang, Ren Dal Negro, Luca Optics Anapole Green's matrix Photonics Plasmonics Multiple scattering Toroidal moment Designing photonic-plasmonic nanostructures with desirable electromagnetic properties is a central problem in modern photonics engineering. As limited by available materials, engineering geometry of optical materials at both element and array levels becomes the key to solve this problem. In this thesis, I present my work on the development of novel methods and design strategies for photonic-plasmonic structures and metamaterials, including novel Green’s matrix-based spectral methods for predicting the optical properties of large-scale nanostructures of arbitrary geometry. From engineering elements to arrays, I begin my thesis addressing toroidal electrodynamics as an emerging approach to enhance light absorption in designed nanodisks by geometrically creating anapole configurations using high-index dielectric materials. This work demonstrates enhanced absorption rates driven by multipolar decomposition of current distributions involving toroidal multipole moments for the first time. I also present my work on designing helical nano-antennas using the rigorous Surface Integral Equations method. The helical nano-antennas feature unprecedented beam-forming and polarization tunability controlled by their geometrical parameters, and can be understood from the array perspective. In these projects, optimization of optical performances are translated into systematic study of identifiable geometric parameters. However, while array-geometry engineering presents multiple advantages, including physical intuition, versatility in design, and ease of fabrication, there is currently no rigorous and efficient solution for designing complex resonances in large-scale systems from an available set of geometrical parameters. In order to achieve this important goal, I developed an efficient numerical code based on the Green’s matrix method for modeling scattering by arbitrary arrays of coupled electric and magnetic dipoles, and show its relevance to the design of light localization and scattering resonances in deterministic aperiodic geometries. I will show how universal properties driven by the aperiodic geometries of the scattering arrays can be obtained by studying the spectral statistics of the corresponding Green’s matrices and how this approach leads to novel metamaterials for the visible and near-infrared spectral ranges. Within the thesis, I also present my collaborative works as examples of direct and inverse designs of nanostructures for photonics applications, including plasmonic sensing, optical antennas, and radiation shaping. 2018-08-09T18:12:40Z 2018-08-09T18:12:40Z 2018 2018-07-03T01:04:47Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/30730 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Optics
Anapole
Green's matrix
Photonics
Plasmonics
Multiple scattering
Toroidal moment
spellingShingle Optics
Anapole
Green's matrix
Photonics
Plasmonics
Multiple scattering
Toroidal moment
Wang, Ren
Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
description Designing photonic-plasmonic nanostructures with desirable electromagnetic properties is a central problem in modern photonics engineering. As limited by available materials, engineering geometry of optical materials at both element and array levels becomes the key to solve this problem. In this thesis, I present my work on the development of novel methods and design strategies for photonic-plasmonic structures and metamaterials, including novel Green’s matrix-based spectral methods for predicting the optical properties of large-scale nanostructures of arbitrary geometry. From engineering elements to arrays, I begin my thesis addressing toroidal electrodynamics as an emerging approach to enhance light absorption in designed nanodisks by geometrically creating anapole configurations using high-index dielectric materials. This work demonstrates enhanced absorption rates driven by multipolar decomposition of current distributions involving toroidal multipole moments for the first time. I also present my work on designing helical nano-antennas using the rigorous Surface Integral Equations method. The helical nano-antennas feature unprecedented beam-forming and polarization tunability controlled by their geometrical parameters, and can be understood from the array perspective. In these projects, optimization of optical performances are translated into systematic study of identifiable geometric parameters. However, while array-geometry engineering presents multiple advantages, including physical intuition, versatility in design, and ease of fabrication, there is currently no rigorous and efficient solution for designing complex resonances in large-scale systems from an available set of geometrical parameters. In order to achieve this important goal, I developed an efficient numerical code based on the Green’s matrix method for modeling scattering by arbitrary arrays of coupled electric and magnetic dipoles, and show its relevance to the design of light localization and scattering resonances in deterministic aperiodic geometries. I will show how universal properties driven by the aperiodic geometries of the scattering arrays can be obtained by studying the spectral statistics of the corresponding Green’s matrices and how this approach leads to novel metamaterials for the visible and near-infrared spectral ranges. Within the thesis, I also present my collaborative works as examples of direct and inverse designs of nanostructures for photonics applications, including plasmonic sensing, optical antennas, and radiation shaping.
author2 Dal Negro, Luca
author_facet Dal Negro, Luca
Wang, Ren
author Wang, Ren
author_sort Wang, Ren
title Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
title_short Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
title_full Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
title_fullStr Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
title_full_unstemmed Rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
title_sort rigorous direct and inverse design of photonic-plasmonic nanostructures
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/30730
work_keys_str_mv AT wangren rigorousdirectandinversedesignofphotonicplasmonicnanostructures
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