Abstract

We experimentally demonstrate unidirectional light transmission through two-layer nanostructured materials considering that the horizontal-to-vertical-polarization conversion efficiency in the forward direction and the vertical-to-horizontal efficiency in the backward direction, which are usually equivalent due to optical reciprocity, are different. The different ways of transferring light momentum in the forward and backward directions via optical near-fields between the layers are responsible for the unidirectionality of light, which was theoretically investigated in our recent work Naruse et al. [J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 31, 2404 (2014)]. With two-layer metal nanostructures experimentally fabricated via a repeated lift-off technique, consistent optical characteristics are observed, verifying the utilization of the large momentum of optical near-fields.

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