Abstract

Creating nonradiating dark modes is key to achieving high-Q resonance in dielectric open cavities. The concept of photonic bound states in the continuum (BIC) offers an efficient method to suppress radiative loss through symmetry engineering. Structural reflection symmetry (RS) has been widely utilized to construct BICs in asymmetric metasurfaces. In this paper, we show that the radiation channel of translational-symmetry (TS) protected BIC in 1D symmetric dimer lattice could be unlocked by dimer spacing perturbation. A semi-analytical coupled mode analysis reveals that the total radiation suppression of the TS-BIC is due to the elimination of the first Fourier harmonic component in the lattice parameters. TS-BIC mechanism could also be applied in a 2D symmetric dimer lattice, and BICs protected by TS are robust to RS breaking, and vice versa, providing a promising way to independently control the quality factor of two interacting BIC resonances. Our results suggest a new degree of freedom to engineer BICs as well as their interactions in dimer lattices tailored by different symmetries, and could provide new insight for realizing practical applications requiring high-Q resonances.

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