Wednesday, May 1, 2013

1304.7990 (R. Paniagua-Domínguez et al.)

Broadband telecom transparency of semiconductor-coated metal nanowires:
more transparent than glass
   [PDF]

R. Paniagua-Domínguez, D. R. Abujetas, L. S. Froufe-Pérez, J. J. Sáenz, J. A. Sánchez-Gil
Metallic nanowires (NW) coated with a high permittivity dielectric are proposed as means to strongly reduce the light scattering of the conducting NW, rendering them transparent at infrared wavelengths of interest in telecommunications. Based on a simple, universal law derived from electrostatics arguments, we find appropriate parameters to reduce the scattering efficiency of hybrid metal-dielectric NW by up to three orders of magnitude as compared with the scattering efficiency of the homogeneous metallic NW. We show that metal@dielectric structures are much more robust against fabrication imperfections than analogous dielectric@metal ones. The bandwidth of the transparent region entirely covers the near IR telecommunications range. Although this effect is optimum at normal incidence and for a given polarization, rigorous theoretical and numerical calculations reveal that transparency is robust against changes in polarization and angle of incidence, and also holds for relatively dense periodic or random arrangements. A wealth of applications based on metal-NWs may benefit from such invisibility.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.7990

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