4.7 Article

Pattern-tunable synthetic gauge fields in topological photonic graphene

Journal

NANOPHOTONICS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 1297-1308

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2021-0647

Keywords

chiral strain-engineering; strong localization; synthetic gauge fields; topological edge state; tunable capability

Funding

  1. Higher Education Sprout Project of the National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
  2. Ministry of Education (MOE), Taiwan
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology in Taiwan
  4. MOST [110-2218-E-A49-012-MBK, MOST 109-2627-M-008-001, MOST 110-2221-E-A49 -058 -MY3]

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In this study, a straightforward and effective design approach for photonic topological insulators supporting high quality factors edge states is proposed using pattern-tunable strain-engineering. Chiral strain-engineering creates opposite synthetic gauge fields in two domains resulting in Landau levels with the same energy spacing but different topological numbers. The strain strongly affects the degree of localization of edge states, while the two-domain design stabilizes the strain-induced topological edge state, providing large scalability for various photonics applications.
We propose a straightforward and effective approach to design, by pattern-tunable strain-engineering, photonic topological insulators supporting high quality factors edge states. Chiral strain-engineering creates opposite synthetic gauge fields in two domains resulting in Landau levels with the same energy spacing but different topological numbers. The boundary of the two topological domains hosts robust time-reversal and spin-momentum-locked edge states, exhibiting high quality factors due to continuous strain modulation. By shaping the synthetic gauge field, we obtain remarkable field confinement and tunability, with the strain strongly affecting the degree of localization of the edge states. Notably, the two-domain design stabilizes the strain-induced topological edge state. The large potential bandwidth of the strain-engineering and the opportunity to induce the mechanical stress at the fabrication stage enables large scalability for many potential applications in photonics, such as tunable microcavities, new lasers, and information processing devices, including the quantum regime.

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