Abstract
Metamaterials have demonstrated significant potential for enhancing nonlinear processes at the nanoscale. The presence of narrowband hot-spots and highly inhomogeneous mode-field distributions often limit the enhancement of nonlinear interactions over larger spatial scales. This has posed a formidable challenge in achieving simultaneous enhancement across a broadband spectral range, significantly constraining the potential of photonic nanostructures in enhancing nonlinear frequency conversion. Here, we propose a broadband resonant mode matching method through near-field examinations that supports the multipole modes and enables the development of an ultrabroadband-enhanced 3-5 μm mid-infrared frequency upconversion technique utilizing a hyperbolic triangular pyramidal metasurface. The gap-plasma mode of the hyperbolic metamaterial multilayer system excites narrowly high-order resonances at near-infrared pump light wavelengths, while the slow-light effect generated by the dipoles achieves ultrabroadband near-field enhancement at mid-infrared wavelengths. The symmetry breaking of the triangular structure localizes these resonant modes at the tips, enabling mode-matched modulation at different wavelengths, and thus boosting the nonlinear frequency conversion process. Our approach provides a promising platform for metasurface-based frequency conversion techniques.
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