posted on 2025-04-01, 07:14authored byShang
Jie Shen, Bo-Ray Lee, Yu Chieh Peng, Yu Jie Wang, Yao-Wei Huang, Yuri Kivshar, Ming Lun Tseng
Deep ultraviolet (DUV) light is critical for novel developments
in molecular spectroscopy, clinical imaging, and nanolithography.
It is promising to advance these technologies by leveraging dielectric
metasurfaces’ strong light manipulation capability. Realizing
metasurfaces with high-quality-factor (high-Q) resonance in the DUV
will be beneficial to those applications as they provide strong field
enhancement and light confinement. However, due to the lack of high-index
and low loss materials in this regime, it is considerably challenging
to realize novel high-Q metasurfaces for sensing and light manipulation.
We propose two device schemes wherein metasurfaces are strategically
placed atop dielectric pillars or freestanding membranes. These configurations
overcome the limitations associated with the low index contrast between
the metasurfaces and substrates, thereby enabling the realization
of high-Q resonance. We present multiple high-Q metasurfaces showcasing
diverse DUV functionalities. The first application is spectrometerless
biomolecular sensing. It is achieved through an array of high-Q metasurfaces
exhibiting resonance associated with a quasi-bound state in the continuum
(quasi-BIC). The strong field enhancement of the metasurfaces empowers
the surface-enhanced deep-ultraviolet absorption (SEDUVA) of the biomolecules,
thus allowing the detection of nanometer-thick analytes. Additionally,
we introduce a nonlocal high-Q metasurface designed for DUV chiral
photonics. It shows a narrow and near-unity peak in its DUV circular
dichroism (CD) spectrum. These results establish a robust platform
for developing novel nanophotonic devices and systems in the critical
DUV wavelength range.