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  4. Fabrication robustness in BIC metasurfaces
 
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Fabrication robustness in BIC metasurfaces

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2021-09-06
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Kühne, Julius
Wang, Juan
Weber, Thomas  
Kühner, Lucca
Maier, Stefan A.  
Tittl, Andreas  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/62270
Journal
Nanophotonics  
Volume
10
Issue
17
Start Page
4305
End Page
4312
Citation
Nanophotonics 10 (17): 4305-4312 (2021)
Publisher DOI
10.1515/nanoph-2021-0391
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85115639917
Publisher
de Gruyter
All-dielectric metasurfaces supporting photonic bound states in the continuum (BICs) are an exciting toolkit for achieving resonances with ultranarrow linewidths. However, the transition from theory to experimental realization can significantly reduce the optical performance of BIC-based nanophotonic systems, severely limiting their application potential. Here, we introduce a combined numerical/experimental methodology for predicting how unavoidable tolerances in nanofabrication such as random geometrical variations affect the performance of different BIC metasurface designs. We compare several established all-dielectric BIC unit cell geometries with broken in-plane inversion symmetry including tilted ellipses, asymmetric double rods, and split rings. Significantly, even for low fabrication-induced geometrical changes, both the BIC resonance amplitude and its quality factor (Q-factor) are significantly reduced. We find that the all-dielectric ellipses maintain the highest Q-factors throughout the geometrical variation range, whereas the rod and split ring geometries fall off more quickly. The same behavior is confirmed experimentally, where geometrical variation values are derived from automated processing of sets of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images. Our methodology provides crucial insights into the performance degradation of BIC metasurfaces when moving from simulations to fabricated samples and will enable the development of robust, high-Q, and easy to manufacture nanophotonic platforms for applications ranging from biomolecular sensing to higher harmonic generation.
Subjects
all-dielectric
bound states in the continuum
nanofabrication
nanophotonics
quality factor
DDC Class
600: Technology
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