Abstract

The use of plasmonic chiral metamaterials for the control of circular polarization has the potential to replace conventional optical equipment for polarization-related applications. The ultra-broadband chiroptic response using plasmonic constituents is delivered by elaborate three-dimensional (3D) helical structures, nevertheless, their implementation is complicated, time-consuming, and poses a significant scaling difficulty at the nano level. Ultra-broadband response from planar constituents is particularly necessary as a means to circumvent the challenges of 3D metamaterials. Here we present a planar plasmonic structure composed of tri-layer anisotropic arrays constituting nanowires and cut-wires to generate dual overlapped chiral bands. Based on this tri-layer approach, we numerically realized ultra-broadband planar plasmonic metamaterials to function in the near- and mid-infrared regions with a bandwidth range of 1.38–3.07 µm and 4.00–8.10 µm, and maximum circular dichroism performance of 0.90 and 0.92 respectively. The structures are ultracompact, misalignments tolerant, and can be extended to additional spectral regions through structural engineering. The proposed metamaterial has the potential to be used in the creation of ultra-compact, high-performance devices for a wide variety of uses, such as those in the fields of optical communication, biological diagnosis, high-contrast polarization imaging, high-accuracy polarimetric measurements, and spectroscopy.

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