Author:
Tao Guangming,Kaufman Joshua J.,Shabahang Soroush,Rezvani Naraghi Roxana,Sukhov Sergey V.,Joannopoulos John D.,Fink Yoel,Dogariu Aristide,Abouraddy Ayman F.
Abstract
Scattering of light from dielectric particles whose size is on the order of an optical wavelength underlies a plethora of visual phenomena in nature and is a foundation for optical coatings and paints. Tailoring the internal nanoscale geometry of such “photonic particles” allows tuning their optical scattering characteristics beyond those afforded by their constitutive materials—however, flexible yet scalable processing approaches to produce such particles are lacking. Here, we show that a thermally induced in-fiber fluid instability permits the “digital design” of multimaterial photonic particles: the precise allocation of high refractive-index contrast materials at independently addressable radial and azimuthal coordinates within its 3D architecture. Exploiting this unique capability in all-dielectric systems, we tune the scattering cross-section of equisized particles via radial structuring and induce polarization-sensitive scattering from spherical particles with broken internal rotational symmetry. The scalability of this fabrication strategy promises a generation of optical coatings in which sophisticated functionality is realized at the level of the individual particles.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
20 articles.
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