Photonic-crystal slabs with a triangular lattice of triangular holes investigated using a guided-mode expansion method
L. C. Andreani, D. Gerace

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes a triangular lattice of triangular holes in photonic crystal slabs, demonstrating the existence of a complete photonic band gap and exploring its potential for nonlinear optical applications using the guided-mode expansion method.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical comparison of triangular and circular hole lattices, highlighting the band gap properties and diffraction losses relevant for nonlinear optics.
Findings
Complete photonic band gap exists for the fundamental guided mode.
Multiple band gaps for different polarizations can be tuned for frequency conversion.
Diffraction losses are comparable between circular and triangular hole lattices.
Abstract
According to a recent proposal [S. Takayama et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 87, 061107 (2005)], the triangular lattice of triangular air holes may allow to achieve a complete photonic band gap in two-dimensional photonic crystal slabs. In this work we present a systematic theoretical study of this photonic lattice in a high-index membrane, and a comparison with the conventional triangular lattice of circular holes, by means of the guided-mode expansion method whose detailed formulation is described here. Photonic mode dispersion below and above the light line, gap maps, and intrinsic diffraction losses of quasi-guided modes are calculated for the periodic lattice as well as for line- and point-defects defined therein. The main results are summarized as follows: (i) the triangular lattice of triangular holes does indeed have a complete photonic band gap for the fundamental guided mode, but the…
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