Hybrid Longitudinal-Transverse Propagating Electric Fields in Photonic Crystal Waveguides
Yanrong Zhang, Hooman Barati Sedeh, Christopher S. Whittington, Natalia M. Litchinitser, Shuren Hu, Sharon M. Weiss

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how specially designed photonic crystal waveguides can hybridize longitudinal and transverse electric fields, enabling advanced control over light propagation and polarization for on-chip photonic applications.
Contribution
The study introduces a full-vectorial theory and experimental validation of hybrid longitudinal-transverse electric modes in antislot photonic crystal waveguides with tunable properties.
Findings
Hybrid LE-TE modes can be engineered via antislot orientation.
Breaking mirror symmetry opens a photonic bandgap.
Maximal LE contribution occurs at 45-degree antislot orientation.
Abstract
In a uniform, source-free, and unbounded medium, Maxwell's equations require electromagnetic waves to be purely transverse. However, when a beam of light is tightly focused or strongly confined, a longitudinal field component can emerge. Strong longitudinal fields enable many novel phenomena and applications, including single molecule detection, near-field imaging, and high-resolution photolithography. Although the behavior of the longitudinal electric (LE) field component of the electromagnetic field in ordinary waveguides is well established, judicious nanostructuring offers unprecedented control over its strength as well as spatial and spectral distribution. Here, we demonstrate a full-vectorial theory and experimental results showing that for specially designed waveguides, such as one-dimensional antislot photonic crystal (PhC) waveguides, the LE field can hybridize with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic Crystals and Applications · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Optical Coatings and Gratings
