We predict theoretically a regime of photon-pair generation driven by the interplay of multiple bound states in the continuum resonances in nonlinear metasurfaces. This nondegenerate photon-pair generation is derived from the hyperbolic topology of the transverse phase matching and can enable orders-of-magnitude enhancement of the photon rate and spectral brightness, as compared to the degenerate regime. We show through comprehensive simulations that the entanglement of the photon pairs can be tuned by varying the pump polarization, which can underpin future advances and applications of ultracompact quantum light sources.
Nanoscale optical integration is nowadays a strategic technological challenge and the ability of generating and manipulating nonlinear optical processes in sub-wavelength volumes is pivotal to realize efficient sensing probes and photonic sources for the next-generation communication technologies. Yet, confining nonlinear processes below the diffraction limit remains a challenging task because phase-matching is not a viable approach at the nanoscale. The localized fields associated to the resonant modes of plasmonic and dielectric nanoantennas offer a route to enhance and control nonlinear processes in highly confined volumes. In my talk I will discuss two nonlinear platforms based on plasmonic and dielectric nanostructures. The first relies on a broken symmetry antenna design, which brings about an efficient second harmonic generation (SHG). We recently applied this concept to an extended array of non-centrosymmetric nanoantennas for sensing applications. I will also show the evidence of a cascaded second-order process in Third Harmonic Generation (THG) in these nanoantennas.
Recently, dielectric nanoantennas emerged as an alternative to plasmonic nanostructures for nanophotonics applications, thanks to their sharp magnetic and electric Mie resonances along with the low ohmic losses in the visible/near-infrared region of the spectrum. I will present our most recent studies on the nonlinear properties of AlGaAs dielectric nanopillars. The strong localized modes along with the broken symmetry in the crystal structure of AlGaAs allow obtaining more than two orders of magnitude higher SHG efficiency with respect to plasmonic nanoantennas with similar spatial footprint and using the same pump power. I will also discuss a few key strategies we recently adopted to optically switch the SHG in these antennas even on the ultrafast time scale. Finally, I will show how to effectively engineer the sum frequency generation via the Mie resonances in these nanoantennas. These results draw a viable blueprint towards room-temperature all optical logic operation at the nanoscale.
Here the engineering of anisotropic plasmonic metasurfaces in the form of nanostripes or nanostripe dimers is demonstrated by a novel self-organization technique. Subwavelength quasi-1D glass templates are fabricated over large (cm2) area by ion beam induced wrinkling, enabling the maskless confinement of out-of-plane tilted gold nanostripe arrays supporting localized plasmon resonances easily tunable from the Visible to the Near-Infrared spectrum. A multi-step variant of the method allows to achieve plasmon hybridization in Au-silica-Au nanostrip dimer arrays with excitation of plasmonic electric dipole and magnetic dipole mode featuring strong subradiant near-field enhancement. The selforganized method enables to tune the hybridized plasmonic mode in the Visible and Near-Infrared spectrum opening the possibility to exploit these templates in highly sensitive biosensing and/or nonlinear optical spectroscopies.
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