Active Hybrid Soft Metamaterials
A special issue of Crystals (ISSN 2073-4352). This special issue belongs to the section "Hybrid and Composite Crystalline Materials".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2023) | Viewed by 17316
Special Issue Editors
2. Physics Department at the University of Calabria and CNR-Nanotech, Via P. Bucci, Arcavacata di Rende, 87036 Cosenza, Italy
Interests: metamaterials fabrication and characterization; plasmonic materials and theory; photonic nanomaterials; active medium modelization; liquid crystals; nanofabrication at high resolution using metamaterials; numerical simulations; two photon direct laser writing, photo-thermal materials; thermoplasmonics; optical metamaterials; ENZ optical nanocavities theory; realization and characterization
2. Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Sciences, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu 610054, China
Interests: liquid crystals; active plasmonics; thermoplasmonics; metamaterials; optics and photonics; policryps fabrication and characterization; fundamental studies of optics
Interests: liquid crystals; photonic crystals; optics and photonics; complex systems; guided wave optics; disorder crystals; optical cryptography
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to present our Special Issue focused on the increasing implementation of metamaterials (MMs) with smart materials that can introduce tunability to their exotic properties. The interest in this research field is growing quite rapidly with the effect of replacing bulky and thick components throughout the electromagnetic spectrum, from optics to the microwave regime passing from terahertz to visible frequencies. This interest arises from the outstanding properties of tunable metasurfaces and metamaterials which are an ultrathin planar medium composed of subwavelength dielectric or metallic elements able to drastically change their optical response. On the other hand, a paramount role is played by the fundamental dispersion relations that are found at each metal–dielectric interface. An example is surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) or the gap surface plasmons (GSPs) generated in these devices: the hybridization of MMs with active media such as Liquid Crystals (LCs) can drastically modify the way SPPs and GSPs arise, and the high birefringence of LCs enables the control and tunability of plasmonic interfaces. Indeed, the key to realizing novel breakthrough applications and systems today is the introduction of active controls and reconfigurability of MMs features. This is possible, for instance, by means of external stimuli that change the dielectric response of the medium surrounding the MM. In the case of LCs, an externally applied electric field can modify the molecular director orientation. A variety of materials modify their optical properties upon thermal (e.g., VO2) or magnetic stimuli (magnetoplasmonic particles). Finally, the optical response of phase-change GST materials (GeSbTe) is determined by their degree of crystallization. In this scenario, the proposed Special Issue aims to connect researchers with expertise in different technological areas, focusing their attention on recent theoretical and experimental results.
This Special Issue addresses the following main topics, but it is not strictly limited to:
- General aspect of tunable metasurfaces and metamaterials;
- Metamaterial properties tunable by means of liquid crystals;
- Metamaterial properties tunable by external stimuli (electric, thermal, magnetic, etc.);
- Surface plasmon polaritons and gap surface polaritons at the plasmonic interface through an active medium;
- Phase change materials (e.g., GeSbTe);
- UV-Vis-NIR, Terahertz, microwave liquid crystal metamaterials/metasurfaces;
- New frontiers on liquid crystals;
- Numerical simulations focused on tunable materials exploiting liquid crystals;
- Semiconductor 2D metamaterials combined with liquid crystals and/or active media;
- 2D materials such as crystals or photonic crystals;
- Nonlinear optical properties induced by LCs, doped LCs, and metamaterials;
- High refractive index single layer materials (such as MoS2, WS2, etc.) or exotic bulky metasurfaces (a-Si:H, SiNx:H, SiCx:H, etc.).
Dr. Giuseppe Emanuele Lio
Prof. Dr. Roberto Caputo
Dr. Francesco Riboli
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- tunable metamaterials
- birefringence
- smart metamaterials
- plasmonic resonances
- metacrystals
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