4.8 Article

Enantio-sensitive unidirectional light bending

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24118-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DFG [SPP 1840, SM 292/5-2, IV 152/6-2]
  2. MURI [EP/N018680/1]
  3. Royal Society [URF\R1\201333]
  4. European Union [899794]

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The study introduces the concept of using structured light's local chirality for efficient chiral discrimination without magnetic interactions, demonstrating the potential for novel applications in molecular fingerprinting and imaging. The authors report enantio-sensitive unidirectional light bending by interacting light with isotropic chiral media, showcasing the advancements in utilizing structured light for chiral recognition.
Structured light, which exhibits nontrivial intensity, phase, and polarization patterns in space, has key applications ranging from imaging and 3D micromanipulation to classical and quantum communication. However, to date, its application to molecular chirality has been limited by the weakness of magnetic interactions. Here we structure light's local handedness in space to introduce and realize an enantio-sensitive interferometer for efficient chiral recognition without magnetic interactions, which can be seen as an enantio-sensitive version of Young's double slit experiment. Upon interaction with isotropic chiral media, such chirality-structured light effectively creates chiral emitters of opposite handedness, located at different positions in space. We show that if the distribution of light's handedness breaks left-right symmetry, the interference of these chiral emitters leads to unidirectional bending of the emitted light, in opposite directions in media of opposite handedness, even if the number of the left-handed and right-handed emitters excited in the medium is exactly the same. Our work introduces the concepts of polarization of chirality and chirality-polarized light, exposes the immense potential of sculpting light's local chirality, and offers novel opportunities for efficient chiral discrimination, enantio-sensitive optical molecular fingerprinting and imaging on ultrafast time scales. Developing new methods for structuring light's chirality in space would be advantageous for various next-generation applications. Here, the authors report enantio-sensitive unidirectional light bending by interacting light with isotropic chiral media.

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