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Published September 7, 2015 | Published
Journal Article Open

Polymer lattices as mechanically tunable 3-dimensional photonic crystals operating in the infrared

Abstract

Broadly tunable photonic crystals in the near- to mid-infrared region could find use in spectroscopy, non-invasive medical diagnosis, chemical and biological sensing, and military applications, but so far have not been widely realized. We report the fabrication and characterization of three-dimensional tunable photonic crystals composed of polymer nanolattices with an octahedron unit-cell geometry. These photonic crystals exhibit a strong peak in reflection in the mid-infrared that shifts substantially and reversibly with application of compressive uniaxial strain. A strain of ∼40% results in a 2.2 μm wavelength shift in the pseudo-stop band, from 7.3 μm for the as-fabricated nanolattice to 5.1 μm when strained. We found a linear relationship between the overall compressive strain in the photonic crystal and the resulting stopband shift, with a ∼50 nm blueshift in the reflection peak position per percent increase in strain. These results suggest that architected nanolattices can serve as efficient three-dimensional mechanically tunable photonic crystals, providing a foundation for new opto-mechanical components and devices across infrared and possibly visible frequencies.

Additional Information

© 2015 AIP Publishing LLC. Received 17 June 2015; accepted 29 August 2015; published online 11 September 2015. V.C. and J.R.G. gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Dow-Resnick Grant and of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under the MCMA program managed by J. Goldwasser (Contract No. W91CRB-10-0305). The work of H.A. and J.A.D. was funded by a Presidential Early Career Award administered through the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (No. FA9550-15-1-0006) and funding from a National Science Foundation CAREER Award (No. DMR-1151231). The authors thank Seok-Woo Lee for assistance with mechanical characterization, George Rossman for FT-IR assistance, Kevin Tran for the creation of preliminary FDTD models, and Christopher Raum for thought provoking discussions. The authors also thank the Kavli Nanoscience Institute (KNI) at Caltech for support and availability of cleanroom facilities.

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