Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides

We have theoretically investigated metal-cladded waveguides of tunable hyperbolic metamaterial (THMM) cores, employing graphene sheets as a tunable layer, in terms of guided waves propagation over near- to mid-infrared range, following the effective medium approximation. We have proven that these su...

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Main Authors: Marcin Kieliszczyk, Bartosz Janaszek, Anna Tyszka-Zawadzka, Paweł Szczepański
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Crystals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/10/3/176
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spelling doaj-f3737d29e07d4a90a70e8a4ccdfa00e52020-11-25T01:48:39ZengMDPI AGCrystals2073-43522020-03-0110317610.3390/cryst10030176cryst10030176Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab WaveguidesMarcin Kieliszczyk0Bartosz Janaszek1Anna Tyszka-Zawadzka2Paweł Szczepański3Warsaw University of Technology, Institute of Microelectronics and Optoelectronics, 75 Koszykowa Street, 00-662 Warsaw, PolandWarsaw University of Technology, Institute of Microelectronics and Optoelectronics, 75 Koszykowa Street, 00-662 Warsaw, PolandWarsaw University of Technology, Institute of Microelectronics and Optoelectronics, 75 Koszykowa Street, 00-662 Warsaw, PolandWarsaw University of Technology, Institute of Microelectronics and Optoelectronics, 75 Koszykowa Street, 00-662 Warsaw, PolandWe have theoretically investigated metal-cladded waveguides of tunable hyperbolic metamaterial (THMM) cores, employing graphene sheets as a tunable layer, in terms of guided waves propagation over near- to mid-infrared range, following the effective medium approximation. We have proven that these subwavelength guiding structures offer a number of effects usually not found in other types of waveguides, including controllable propagation gap and number of modes, inversion of power flow direction with respect to phase velocity, TM mode propagation, and absence of the fundamental mode, which occur as a result of controlled change of the guiding layer dispersion regime. This is the first time that the above-mentioned effects are obtained with a single, voltage-controlled waveguiding structure comprising graphene sheets and a dielectric, although the presented methodology allows us to incorporate other tunable materials beyond graphene equally well. We believe that such or similar structures, feasible by means of current planar deposition techniques, will ultimately find their practical applications in optical signal processing, controlled phase matching, controlled coupling, signal modulation, or the enhancement of nonlinear effects.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/10/3/176hyperbolic metamaterialsslab waveguidesguided wavesoptical waves
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcin Kieliszczyk
Bartosz Janaszek
Anna Tyszka-Zawadzka
Paweł Szczepański
spellingShingle Marcin Kieliszczyk
Bartosz Janaszek
Anna Tyszka-Zawadzka
Paweł Szczepański
Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
Crystals
hyperbolic metamaterials
slab waveguides
guided waves
optical waves
author_facet Marcin Kieliszczyk
Bartosz Janaszek
Anna Tyszka-Zawadzka
Paweł Szczepański
author_sort Marcin Kieliszczyk
title Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
title_short Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
title_full Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
title_fullStr Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
title_full_unstemmed Guided Optical Modes in Metal-Cladded Tunable Hyperbolic Metamaterial Slab Waveguides
title_sort guided optical modes in metal-cladded tunable hyperbolic metamaterial slab waveguides
publisher MDPI AG
series Crystals
issn 2073-4352
publishDate 2020-03-01
description We have theoretically investigated metal-cladded waveguides of tunable hyperbolic metamaterial (THMM) cores, employing graphene sheets as a tunable layer, in terms of guided waves propagation over near- to mid-infrared range, following the effective medium approximation. We have proven that these subwavelength guiding structures offer a number of effects usually not found in other types of waveguides, including controllable propagation gap and number of modes, inversion of power flow direction with respect to phase velocity, TM mode propagation, and absence of the fundamental mode, which occur as a result of controlled change of the guiding layer dispersion regime. This is the first time that the above-mentioned effects are obtained with a single, voltage-controlled waveguiding structure comprising graphene sheets and a dielectric, although the presented methodology allows us to incorporate other tunable materials beyond graphene equally well. We believe that such or similar structures, feasible by means of current planar deposition techniques, will ultimately find their practical applications in optical signal processing, controlled phase matching, controlled coupling, signal modulation, or the enhancement of nonlinear effects.
topic hyperbolic metamaterials
slab waveguides
guided waves
optical waves
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/10/3/176
work_keys_str_mv AT marcinkieliszczyk guidedopticalmodesinmetalcladdedtunablehyperbolicmetamaterialslabwaveguides
AT bartoszjanaszek guidedopticalmodesinmetalcladdedtunablehyperbolicmetamaterialslabwaveguides
AT annatyszkazawadzka guidedopticalmodesinmetalcladdedtunablehyperbolicmetamaterialslabwaveguides
AT pawełszczepanski guidedopticalmodesinmetalcladdedtunablehyperbolicmetamaterialslabwaveguides
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