4.4 Article

Generalized Kerker effect in PT-symmetric nanoantenna array

Journal

JOURNAL OF OPTICS
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2040-8986/ac486f

Keywords

Generalized Kerker effect; PT symmetry; asymmetric scattering; nanoantenna array

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India

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All-dielectric nanophotonics is a rapidly developing and practical alternative to plasmonics for nanoscale optics. Recently, nanophotonic structures satisfying parity-time (PT) symmetry have been shown to exhibit a novel scattering anomaly called lasing spectral singularity. This paper analyzes the direction-sensitive scattering response of the PT-symmetric GaInP metasurface and explores the design of tunable sources with direction-sensitive emission properties.
All-dielectric nanophotonics is a rapidly developing and practical alternative to plasmonics for nanoscale optics. The electric and magnetic Mie resonances in high-index low-loss dielectric nanoresonators can be engineered to exhibit unique scattering responses. Recently, nanophotonic structures satisfying parity-time (PT) symmetry have been shown to exhibit novel scattering responses beyond what can be achieved from the conventional nanoresonators. The complex interference of the magnetic and electric Mie resonances and lattice modes excited in PT-symmetric nanoantenna arrays give rise to a scattering anomaly called lasing spectral singularity (SS), where the scattering coefficients tend to infinity. In our previous work (Tapar, Kishen and Emani 2020 Opt. Lett. 45 5185), we demonstrated the existence of lasing SSs in vertically stacked two-dimensional (2D) GaInP PT-symmetric metasurface. In this paper, we analyse the direction-sensitive scattering response of the PT-symmetric GaInP metasurface by decomposing the total scattered field into the electric and magnetic multipoles. The far-field scattering response at the singularity is highly asymmetric for incidence from either the gain or loss side and can be tuned by changing the geometry. By analysing the phase of even- and odd-parity higher-order multipoles, we explain the observed scattering response over a broad parameter space in terms of the generalized Kerker effect. The interference between the direction-dependent excitation of different order multipoles and the overall 2D-lattice resonance opens a route towards designing a special class of tunable sources exhibiting direction-sensitive emission properties.

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