Anderson localization in metamaterials and other complex media
Sergey A. Gredeskul, Yuri S. Kivshar, Ara A. Asatrian, Konstantin Y., Bliokh, Yuri P. Bliokh, Valentin D. Freilikher, and Ilya V. Shadrivov

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in Anderson localization phenomena across various complex media, highlighting how metamaterials, graphene, and nonlinear dielectrics influence wave transport and localization.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of novel localization effects in complex media, including suppression, nonreciprocity, and bistability, with new theoretical insights and experimental findings.
Findings
Left-handed metamaterials suppress light localization and enhance transmission.
Magneto-active structures exhibit nonreciprocal and unidirectional light transport.
Disorder in graphene superlattices causes resonant transmission and unusual conductive properties.
Abstract
We review some recent (mostly ours) results on the Anderson localization of light and electron waves in complex disordered systems, including: (i) left-handed metamaterials, (ii) magneto-active optical structures, (iii) graphene superlattices, and (iv) nonlinear dielectric media. First, we demonstrate that left-handed metamaterials can significantly suppress localization of light and lead to an anomalously enhanced transmission. This suppression is essential at the long-wavelength limit in the case of normal incidence, at specific angles of oblique incidence (Brewster anomaly), and in the vicinity of the zero-epsilon or zero-mu frequencies for dispersive metamaterials. Remarkably, in disordered samples comprised of alternating normal and left-handed metamaterials, the reciprocal Lyapunov exponent and reciprocal transmittance increment can differ from each other. Second, we study…
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