Metallo-dielectric diamond and zinc-blende photonic crystals
Alexander Moroz

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that small metal inclusions in diamond and zinc-blende photonic crystals can create large, stable complete photonic band gaps in the near infrared and visible spectrum, even with predominantly low-index materials.
Contribution
It reveals how low-absorbing metal inclusions induce significant and robust photonic band gaps in dielectric structures, expanding material choices for photonic crystal fabrication.
Findings
Metal inclusions enable large CPBGs at near infrared and visible wavelengths.
The 2nd-3rd CPBG is the most stable against disorder.
A sizeable CPBG can be achieved with over 97% low-index materials.
Abstract
It is shown that small inclusions of a low absorbing metal can have a dramatic effect on the photonic band structure. In the case of diamond and zinc-blende photonic crystals, several complete photonic band gaps (CPBG's) can open in the spectrum, between the 2nd-3rd, 5th-6th, and 8th-9th bands. Unlike in the purely dielectric case, in the presence of small inclusions of a low absorbing metal the largest CPBG for a moderate dielectric constant (epsilon<=10) turns out to be the 2nd-3rd CPBG. The 2nd-3rd CPBG is the most important CPBG, because it is the most stable against disorder. For a diamond and zinc-blende structure of nonoverlapping dielectric and metallo-dielectric spheres, a CPBG begins to decrease with an increasing dielectric contrast roughly at the point where another CPBG starts to open--a kind of gap competition. A CPBG can even shrink to zero when the dielectric contrast…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
