4.8 Article

Observation of Supercavity Modes in Subwavelength Dielectric Resonators

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202003804

Keywords

bound states in the continuum; dielectric resonators; Fano resonances; metaoptics; Mie resonances; photonics; supercavity modes

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [18-32-20205, 18-37-00486, 20-52-00031]
  2. Australian Research Council
  3. Strategic Fund of the Australian National University
  4. Foundation for the Advancement of Theoretical Physics and Mathematics BASIS
  5. Russian Federation [MK-2224.2020.2]

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This study investigates the experimental observation of supercavity modes in dielectric resonators with high refractive index, and discusses the achievement of supercavity modes through precise tuning of resonator dimensions. Experimental results demonstrate efficient excitation of supercavity modes in both near- and far-fields, exhibiting characteristic Fano resonance properties.
Electromagnetic response of dielectric resonators with high refractive index is governed by optically induced electric and magnetic Mie resonances facilitating confinement of light with the amplitude enhancement. Traditionally, strong subwavelength trapping of light was associated only with plasmonic or epsilon-near-zero structures, which however suffer from material losses. Recently, an alternative localization mechanism was proposed allowing the trapping of light in individual subwavelength optical resonators with a high quality factor in the regime of a supercavity mode. Here, the experimental observation of the supercavity modes in subwavelength ceramic resonators in the radio-frequency range is presented. It is experimentally demonstrated that the regime of supercavity modes can be achieved via precise tuning of the resonator's dimensions. A huge growth of the unloaded quality factor is achieved with experimental values up to 1.25 x 10(4), limited only by material losses of ceramics. It is revealed that the supercavity modes can be excited efficiently both in the near- and far-field. In both cases, the supercavity mode manifests itself explicitly as a Fano resonance with characteristic peculiarities of spectral shape and radiation pattern. A comparison of supercavities made of diversified materials for the visible, infrared, THz, and radio-frequency regimes is provided.

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