Achieving strongly negative scattering asymmetry factor in random media composed of dual-dipolar particles
B. X. Wang, C. Y. Zhao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how structural correlations and the second Kerker condition in disordered silicon nanoparticle media can produce a strongly negative scattering asymmetry factor, significantly affecting radiative transfer and backscattering.
Contribution
The authors derive analytical expressions for scattering properties in correlated dual-dipolar particle systems, revealing conditions for negative asymmetry factors in random media.
Findings
Achieved a negative scattering asymmetry factor of approximately -0.5.
Enhanced backscattering with increased particle concentration.
Transport mean free path is significantly reduced, below independent scattering predictions.
Abstract
Understanding radiative transfer in random media like micro/nanoporous and particulate materials, allows people to manipulate the scattering and absorption of radiation, as well as opens new possibilities in applications such as imaging through turbid media, photovoltaics and radiative cooling. A strong-backscattering phase function, i.e., a negative scattering asymmetry parameter , is of great interest which can possibly achieve unusual radiative transport phenomena, for instance, Anderson localization of light. Based on the multipole expansion of Foldy-Lax equations and quasicrystalline approximation (QCA), we have rigorously derived analytical expressions for effective propagation constant and scattering phase function for a random system containing dual-dipolar particles, by taking the effect of structural correlations into account. Here we demonstrate that by utilizing…
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