Abstract

Abstract The emerging field of photonic topological insulators offers promising platforms for high-performance optical communication, computing, and sensing. However, conventional photonic topological insulator designs typically operate within the diffraction limit due to their dielectric nature. This limitation imposes constraints on device miniaturization, reduces light–matter interaction, and decreases overall device sensitivity. Introducing a new valley-Hall hybrid plasmonic topological insulator, we overcome this limitation by exploiting the coupling of surface plasmon oscillations with the optical modes of a dielectric photonic crystal, allowing for sub-diffraction vertical confinement of light. Deep-subwavelength chiral edge states can, therefore, be generated and robustly guided along disordered Z-shaped topological boundaries with much lower propagation loss compared to purely plasmonic platforms. Such extreme manipulation of light on an integrated chip platform maximizes light–matter interaction and opens the door for truly compact and efficient optical modulators, molecular sensors, and next-generation nanophotonic and quantum devices.

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