4.5 Review

Nonreciprocal and Topological Plasmonics

Journal

PHOTONICS
Volume 8, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/photonics8040133

Keywords

plasmonics; nanophotonics; nonreciprocity; topological physics; surface waves

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1741694]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA9550-19-1-0043]

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The article explores the nonreciprocity and topology effects in plasmonic materials by translating relevant concepts from condensed-matter systems to photonics. This leads to the discovery of new regimes of truly unidirectional, backscattering-immune surface-wave propagation in various plasmonic systems.
Metals, semiconductors, metamaterials, and various two-dimensional materials with plasmonic dispersion exhibit numerous exotic physical effects in the presence of an external bias, for example an external static magnetic field or electric current. These physical phenomena range from Faraday rotation of light propagating in the bulk to strong confinement and directionality of guided modes on the surface and are a consequence of the breaking of Lorentz reciprocity in these systems. The recent introduction of relevant concepts of topological physics, translated from condensed-matter systems to photonics, has not only given a new perspective on some of these topics by relating certain bulk properties of plasmonic media to the surface phenomena, but has also led to the discovery of new regimes of truly unidirectional, backscattering-immune, surface-wave propagation. In this article, we briefly review the concepts of nonreciprocity and topology and describe their manifestation in plasmonic materials. Furthermore, we use these concepts to classify and discuss the different classes of guided surface modes existing on the interfaces of various plasmonic systems.

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