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Nano-kirigami with giant optical chirality
Author(s) -
Zhiguang Liu,
Huifeng Du,
Jiafang Li,
Ling Lü,
Zhi-Yuan Li,
Nicholas X. Fang
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aat4436
Subject(s) - mesoscopic physics , nanotechnology , nano , nanophotonics , nanostructure , chirality (physics) , materials science , nanoscopic scale , nanolithography , fabrication , buckling , metamaterial , physics , optoelectronics , composite material , symmetry breaking , medicine , chiral symmetry breaking , alternative medicine , quantum mechanics , pathology , nambu–jona lasinio model
Kirigami enables versatile shape transformation from two-dimensional (2D) precursors to 3D architectures with simplified fabrication complexity and unconventional structural geometries. We demonstrate a one-step and on-site nano-kirigami method that avoids the prescribed multistep procedures in traditional mesoscopic kirigami or origami techniques. The nano-kirigami is readily implemented by in situ cutting and buckling a suspended gold film with programmed ion beam irradiation. By using the topography-guided stress equilibrium, rich 3D shape transformation such as buckling, rotation, and twisting of nanostructures is precisely achieved, which can be predicted by our mechanical modeling. Benefiting from the nanoscale 3D twisting features, giant optical chirality is achieved in an intuitively designed 3D pinwheel-like structure, in strong contrast to the achiral 2D precursor without nano-kirigami. The demonstrated nano-kirigami, as well as the exotic 3D nanostructures, could be adopted in broad nanofabrication platforms and could open up new possibilities for the exploration of functional micro-/nanophotonic and mechanical devices.

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