Abstract

Dynamic control of circularly polarized photoluminescence has aroused great interest in quantum optics and nanophotonics. Chiral plasmonic metasurfaces enable the manipulation of the polarization state via plasmon-photon coupling. However, current plasmonic light-emitting metasurfaces for effective deterministic modulation of spin-dependent emission at near-infrared wavelengths are underexplored in terms of dissymmetry and tunability. Here, we demonstrate a microfluidic hybrid emitting system of a suspended twisted stacking metasurface coated with PbS quantum dots. The suspended metasurface is fabricated with a single step of electron beam exposure, exhibiting a strong optical chirality of 309° μm-1 with a thickness of less than λ/10 at key spectral locations. With significant chiral-selective interactions, enhanced photoluminescence is achieved with strong dissymmetry in circular polarization. The dissymmetry factor of the induced circularly polarized emission can reach 1.54. More importantly, altering the refractive index of the surrounding medium at the bottom surface of the metasurface can effectively manipulate the chiroptical responses of the hybrid system, hence leading to chirality-reversed emission. This active hybrid emitting system could be a resultful platform for chirality-switchable light emission from achiral quantum emitters, holding great potential for anticounterfeiting, biosensing, light sources, imaging, and displays.

Full Text
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