Abstract
Lattice resonances are collective electromagnetic modes supported by periodic arrays of metallic nanostructures. These excitations arise from the coherent multiple scattering between the elements of the array and, thanks to their collective origin, produce very strong and spectrally narrow optical responses. In recent years, there has been significant effort dedicated to characterizing the lattice resonances supported by arrays built from complex unit cells containing multiple nanostructures. Simultaneously, periodic arrays with chiral unit cells, made of either an individual nanostructure with a chiral morphology or a group of nanostructures placed in a chiral arrangement, have been shown to exhibit lattice resonances with different responses to right- and left-handed circularly polarized light. Motivated by this, here, we investigate the lattice resonances supported by square bipartite arrays in which the relative positions of the nanostructures can vary in all three spatial dimensions, effectively functioning as 2.5-dimensional arrays. We find that these systems can support lattice resonances with almost perfect chiral responses and very large quality factors, despite the achirality of the unit cell. Furthermore, we show that the chiral response of the lattice resonances originates from the constructive and destructive interference between the electric and magnetic dipoles induced in the two nanostructures of the unit cell. Our results serve to establish a theoretical framework to describe the optical response of 2.5-dimensional arrays and provide an approach to obtain chiral lattice resonances in periodic arrays with achiral unit cells.
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