Publication | Open Access
Visualization of Higher-Order Topological Insulating Phases in Two-Dimensional Dielectric Photonic Crystals
570
Citations
55
References
2019
Year
EngineeringTopological MaterialsTopological Quantum StateTopological PhysicsOptical PropertiesTopological PhasesHigher-order Topological InsulatorsNanophotonicsPhotonicsQuantum SciencePhysicsPhotonic MaterialsTopological MaterialTopological PhaseMatter PhysicsTopological InsulatorApplied PhysicsPhotonic StructuresCondensed Matter Physics
Topological phases have expanded from condensed‑matter physics to photonic systems, enabling robust devices, and higher‑order topological insulators—beyond conventional bulk‑boundary correspondence—have been studied mainly in negative‑coupling multipole lattices. We visualize one‑dimensional edge and zero‑dimensional corner states in two‑dimensional dielectric photonic crystals with near‑field scanning. We experimentally realize second‑order topological insulating phases without negative coupling in 2D dielectric photonic crystals, opening new research frontiers and offering a hierarchical light‑manipulation mechanism.
The studies of topological phases of matter have been developed from condensed matter physics to photonic systems, resulting in fascinating designs of robust photonic devices. Recently, higher-order topological insulators have been investigated as a novel topological phase of matter beyond the conventional bulk-boundary correspondence. Previous studies of higher-order topological insulators have been mainly focused on the topological multipole systems with negative coupling between lattice sites. Here we experimentally demonstrate that second-order topological insulating phases without negative coupling can be realized in two-dimensional dielectric photonic crystals. We visualize both one-dimensional topological edge states and zero-dimensional topological corner states by using the near-field scanning technique. Our findings open new research frontiers for photonic topological phases and provide a new mechanism for light manipulating in a hierarchical way.
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