High-Order Hilbert Curves: Fractal Structures with Isotropic, Tailorable Optical Properties
Journal article, 2015

© 2015 American Chemical Society. Fractals are promising candidates as nonperiodic, nonresonant structures exhibiting a homogeneous, isotropic, and frequency-independent effective optical response. We present a comprehensive optical investigation of a metallic Hilbert curve of fractal order N = 9 in the visible and near-infrared spectral range. Our experiments show that high-order fractal nanostructures exhibit a nearly frequency independent reflectance and an in-plane isotropic optical response. The response can be simulated in the framework of a simple effective medium approximation model with a limited number of parameters. It is shown that high-order Hilbert structures can be considered as a transparent in-plane metal, the dielectric function of which is modified by the filling factor f, hence creating a tunable conductive effective metal with tailorable plasma frequency and variable reflectance without going through an insulator-to-metal transition.

fractal

near-infrared

spectroscopic ellipsometry

optical properties

Bruggeman effective medium approximation

self-similar nanostructures

optical frequencies

visible

tunable metal

Hilbert curve

Author

Stefano De Zuani

Universitat Stuttgart

T. Reindl

Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research

Marcus Rommel

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Nanofabrication Laboratory

Bruno Gompf

Universitat Stuttgart

Audrey Berrier

Universitat Stuttgart

Martin Dressel

Universitat Stuttgart

ACS Photonics

2330-4022 (eISSN)

Vol. 2 12 1719-1724

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Nano Technology

DOI

10.1021/acsphotonics.5b00363

More information

Created

10/8/2017