† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant Nos. 2018YFA0704401, 2017YFF0206103, and 2016YFA0203500), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 61922002, 91850103, 11674014, 61475005, 11527901, 11525414, and 91850111), and the Beijing Natural Science Foundation, China (Grant No. Z180015).
Narrowband and high-transmission optical filters are extensively used in color display technology, optical information processing, and high-sensitive sensing. Because of large ohmic losses in metallic nanostructures, metallic filters usually exhibit low transmittances and broad bandwidths. By employing both strong field enhancements in metallic nano-slits and the Wood’s anomaly in a periodic metallic grating, an extra-narrowband and high-transmission metallic filter is numerically predicted in an ultrathin single-layer metallic grating. Simulation results show that the Wood’s anomaly in the ultrathin (thickness H = 60 nm) single-layer metallic grating results in large field enhancements in the substrate and low losses in the metallic grating. As a result, the transmission bandwidth (transmittance T > 60%) at λ = 1200 nm is as small as ΔλFWHM = 1.6 nm, which is smaller than 4% of that in the previous thin dielectric and metallic filters. The corresponding quality factor is as high as Q = λ/ΔλFWHM = 750, which is 40 times greater than that in the previous reports. Moreover, the thickness of our metallic filter (H = 60 nm) is smaller than 40% of that in the previous reports, and its maximum transmittance can reach up to 80%. In experiments, a narrowband metallic filter with a bandwidth of about ΔλFWHM = 10 nm, which is smaller than 25% of that in the previous metallic filters, is demonstrated.
Optical filters are an important element in optical displays,[1] sensors,[2] digital photography,[3] and so on. Various filters have been proposed in recent decades, including dye or pigment filters,[4] dielectric filters,[5,6] and metallic filters.[7] Compared with conventional dye or pigment filters,[4] dielectric and metallic filters based on micro/nano-structures exhibit better ultraviolet, power, and temperature reliability. Additionally, the filtering properties of dielectric and metallic filters can be easily manipulated by geometrical dimensions, such as the shape and size of the nanostructures. However, miniaturization of dielectric filters is hampered by the diffraction limit of light. What is worse, because of small contrasts of refractive indices, reflection on an interface of different dielectric materials is very low (e.g., reflectivity ∼ 16% on a Si–SiO2 interface), making the bandwidths (full width at half-maximum, FWHM) of dielectric filters with several layers greater than 100 nm.[5,6]
Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) supported by metallic nanostructures are electromagnetic waves confined on metal surfaces at the visiable and infrared frequencies.[8] Due to subwavelength field confinements and large field enhancements, SPPs are promising to significantly miniaturize photonic devices.[8] Recently, various metallic nanostructures based on SPPs have been proposed to realize metallic filters, including periodic subwavelength metallic hole arrays,[9–11] metallic metasurfaces,[12–14] and metal–insulator–metal (MIM) nanoresonators.[15–17] For example, by periodically designing subwavelength hole arrays on a metal film with optical thickness, a metallic filter could be achieved based on the extraordinary optical transmission (EOT).[18] However, due to the subwavelength diameters of the hole arrays on the optical thick metal film (thickness > 150 nm), the absolute transmittance was rather low (T < 50%).[9,11] Moreover, the transmission spectra were broad (ΔλFWHM > 100 nm) because of the inherent ohmic losses in metals. Metallic metasurfaces could be used to achieve reflective plasmonic filters based on resonant absorptions of gap SPP modes in MIM nanoresonators (gap thickness < 50 nm).[12,13] Although the maximum reflection peak was as high as T = 90%,[14] their reflection spectra were still rather broad (ΔλFWHM > 100 nm) because of the large resonant absorptions of the MIM nanogaps.[12,13] Recently, by designing a metasurface with arrays of elliptical and circular nanoholes on an 80-nm-thick gold film, which was covered by a 300-nm-thick SiO2 layer, the transmittance and bandwidth were reported to be T = 44% and ΔλFWHM ≈ 79 nm, respectively.[14] By using planar MIM structures (the thickness of the insulator > 100 nm), a narrowband (ΔλFWHM ≈ 40 nm) metallic filter was realized based on the Fabry–Perot effect because of the high reflectance (> 60%) of the metals, and the maximum transmittance was T ≈ 60%.[17] The thicknesses of these filters based on multilayer MIM structures were larger than 150 nm.[15–17] In the above metallic filters,[9–17] the bandwidths could not be further decreased due to the inherent ohmic losses of the metals. Therefore, it is a great challenge to realize thin metallic filters with both narrow bandwidths and high transmittances, which are important for high resolution optical imaging, dense wavelength-division-multiplexed optical information processing, and high-sensitive sensing in the micro/nano optics.
In this paper, an extra-narrowband metallic filter is numerically and experimentally demonstrated with an ultrathin (thickness H = 60 nm) single-layer metallic grating. When a p-polarized incident beam illuminates the one-dimensional (1D) metallic grating, huge field enhancements occur in the nano-slits, and interference of radiative fields from the periodic nano-slits gives rise to the Wood’s anomaly in the thin periodic metallic grating. Unlike localized field enhancements of SPPs on metal–dielectric interfaces, the Wood’s anomaly results in large field enhancements in the substrate, which efficiently reduces the ohmic losses in metals. The strong field in the substrate can pass through the nano-slits, resulting in an extra-narrowband and high-transmission filter because of the reduced ohmic losses in metals. Numerical simulation results show that a transmission peak is up to T = 80%, and a transmission bandwidth at λ = 1200 nm is as small as ΔλFWHM ≈ 1.6 nm, which is much smaller than that in the previous reports (ΔλFWHM ≥ 40 nm).[9–17] The corresponding quality factor is as high as Q = λ/ΔλFWHM = 750, which is 40 times greater than that in the previous reports.[9–17] Experimentally, metallic gratings are fabricated on an ultrathin single-layer gold film, and the experimental results consist with the simulation data. Due to polycrystalline gold films and fabrication defects, the narrowest bandwidth in the experiment becomes ΔλFWHM ≈ 10 nm, which is still smaller than 25% of that in the previous reports (ΔλFWHM ≥ 40 nm).[9–17]
The ultrathin metallic grating structure is schematically shown in Fig.
For the verification of the analysis, a commercial software COMSOL Multiphysics is firstly adopted for simulating the transmission spectra of the nano-struectures.[21] The metal film is selected as a gold film with a thickness of H = 60 nm. The thickness is smaller than 40% of that in the previous dielectric and metallic filters (thickness ≥ 150 nm).[9–17] The geometric parameters of the grating are P = 600 nm and w = 60 nm. The permittivity of gold is derived from the experiment results in Ref. [22]. The substrate is K9 glass with a refractive index of n = 1.5. For the gold film with H = 60 nm, the reflection is as high as 96.3%, and the transmittance is only 0.5% at λ = 9000 nm. Figure
However, under an s-polarized incident beam, the transmission peaks vanish, and the transmittance is about 1% at λ = 900 nm, as shown by the red solid line in Fig.
Additionally, to verify the linear relationship between the resonant wavelength and the period P of the metallic grating in Eq. (
Unlike conventional metallic filters with localized field enhancement of SPPs on the metal–dielectric interface,[9–14] the enhanced field generated by the Wood’s anomaly in our scheme is mainly distributed in the substrate, which can efficiently reduce the ohmic losses in the metallic film. As a result, the bandwidth is effectively decreased, and the narrowest bandwidth (ΔλFWHM ≈ 1.6 nm at λ = 1200 nm) is smaller than 4% of that in the previous reports (ΔλFWHM ≥ 40 nm).[9–17] The bandwidth (ΔλFWHM ≈ 1.6 nm at λ = 1200 nm) is also much narrower than that (ΔλFWHM ≈ 10 nm) of commercial dielectric filters (e.g., FB1200-10 in Thorlabs). Moreover, the transmittance (> 60%) is greater than that (< 50%) of commercial dielectric filters (e.g., FB1200-10 in Thorlabs). The corresponding quality factor is as high as Q = λ/ΔλFWHM = 750, which is 40 times greater than that in the previous reports.[9–17] By using a silver grating, the bandwidth of our metallic filter can be further narrowed at long wavelengths because of lower ohmic losses in silver.
According to the polarization dependence of the one-dimensional (1D) metallic grating above, it is possible to develop a switchable metallic filter, which has great potential applications in the active digital display and high-density data storage.[23] Herein, an ultrathin two-dimensional (2D) orthogonal metallic grating with different periods is designed as shown in Fig.
In order to verify our theory and simulation, we use focused ion beams (FIB) to fabricated 1D metallic gratings in a gold film with a thickness of 60 nm, which is deposited on a 20 mm × 20 mm K9 glass substrate. A scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image and its zoomed-in view are displayed in Figs.
A measured transmission spectrum of a gold grating with P = 400 nm is shown in Fig.
The experimental transmission spectra exhibit lower transmittances and broader bandwidths than the simulation results. The broader bandwidths originate from the large losses caused by the polycrystalline gold film[25] and the fabrication roughness[26] in the experiments. These large losses also result in lower transmittances in the experiment. Additionally, the slit width w and thickness H of the nanoslits in the experiment deviate from those (when H = 60 nm and w = 80 nm) in the simulation. This deviation also leads to lower transmittances in the experiment, which can be observed in the simulation results of Fig.
To decrease the bandwidths of the metallic filter, a monocrystalline metallic (gold or silver) film, which has lower ohmic losses, can be prepared based on an chemically synthesis[27,28] or molecular beam epitaxy (MBE).[29] More importantly, the bandwidth of our metallic filter can be further narrowed by using monocrystalline silver films. By using an FIB technology based on helium[30] or an advanced method based on a lift-off process using high-resolution electron beam lithography (EBL) with a negative-tone hydrogen silsesquioxane (HSQ) resist,[31–33] the slit width can be reliably fabricated to satisfy the designed structural parameters. As a result, the transmittance of the metallic filter could be increased.
A 2D orthogonal grating is also fabricated in a 60 nm-thick gold film on a 20 mm × 20 mm K9 glass substrate. A SEM image of the 2D orthogonal gold grating with P1 = 400 nm and P2 = 430 nm and its zoomed-in view are displayed in Figs.
In summary, by employing both strong field enhancements in metallic nano-slits and the Wood’s anomaly in an ultrathin (H = 60 nm) single-layer gold grating, a metallic filter with an extra-narrow bandwidth was demonstrated. Our filter was 40% thinner than the previous dielectric and metallic filters (thickness ≥ 150 nm).[9–17] Unlike localized field enhancement of SPPs on metal–dielectric interfaces, the Wood’s anomaly in the ultrathin single-layer gold grating led to large field enhancements in the substrate, which efficiently reduced ohmic losses in the metals. The narrowest transmission bandwidth (transmittance > 60% ) at λ = 1200 nm was as small as ΔλFWHM ≈ 1.6 nm, which was smaller than 4% of that (ΔλFWHM ≥ 40 nm) in the previous reports.[9–17] The corresponding quality factor was as high as λ/ΔλFWHM = 750, which was 40 times greater than that in the previous reports.[9–17] The performances (bandwidth, transmittance, and thickness) of the metallic filter were even better than commercial dielectric filters (e.g., FB1200-10 in Thorlabs). Based on the polarization-dependent property of the metallic grating, the transmission spectra could be adjusted by rotating the incident polarization or the the metallic grating. In the experiment, metallic gratings were fabricated on a single-layer gold film. A narrowband metallic filter with a bandwidth of ΔλFWHM = 10 nm, which was smaller than 25% of that (ΔλFWHM ≥ 40 nm) in the previous reports,[9–17] was demonstrated. This extra-narrowband metallic filter with polarization-dependent properties would offer great potential for the practical applications in optical display technology, optical information processing, hyperspectral imaging, and high-density optical storage.
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