Publication | Closed Access
Enantiospecific Optical Enhancement of Chiral Sensing and Separation with Dielectric Metasurfaces
231
Citations
45
References
2018
Year
Circularly polarized light (CPL) exhibits an enantioselective interaction with chiral molecules, providing a pathway toward all-optical chiral resolution. High index dielectric nanoparticles have been shown to enhance this relationship, but with a spatially varying sign (or enantiospecificity) that yields a near zero spatially averaged enhancement. Using full field electromagnetic simulations, we design metasurfaces consisting of high index dielectric disks that provide large-volume, uniform-sign enhancements in both the optical density of chirality, C (the figure of merit for sensing and spectroscopy), and Kuhn’s dissymmetry factor, g (the figure of merit for separation). By varying disk radius, we achieve local enhancements in C and g up to 138-fold and 15-fold, respectively, as well as volumetric enhancements of 30-fold and 4.2-fold. The uniform-sign enhancements in C occur near the first Kerker condition, where overlapping electric and magnetic modes maximize field strength and preserve the π/2 phase lag between the electric and magnetic fields of CPL; in contrast, uniform-sign enhancements in g occur with spectrally separated modes, where fields and phase remain optimal without reduced molecular absorption. Using first-order kinetics of the molecule thiocamphor, we show how this optically enantiopure metasurface could enable 20% enantiomeric excesses with a >2000-fold increase in yield for a photoionization reaction compared to CPL alone.
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