Abstract
It is generally accepted that the magnetic component of light has a minor role in the light-matter interaction. The recent discovery of metamaterials has broken this traditional understanding, as both the electric and the magnetic field are key ingredients in metamaterials. The top-down technology used so far employs noble metals with large intrinsic losses. Here we report on a bottom-up approach for processing metamaterials based on suspensions of monodisperse full dielectric silicon nanocavities with a large magnetic response in the near-infrared region. Experimental results and theory show that silicon-colloid-based liquid suspensions and photonic crystals made of two-dimensional arrays of particles have strong magnetic response in the near-infrared region with small optical losses. Our findings might have important implications in the bottom-up processing of large-area low-loss metamaterials working in the near-infrared region. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Shi, L., Harris, J. T., Fenollosa, R., Rodriguez, I., Lu, X., Korgel, B. A., & Meseguer, F. (2013). Monodisperse silicon nanocavities and photonic crystals with magnetic response in the optical region. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2934
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