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Dive into the research topics where Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin is active.

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Featured researches published by Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin.


Nano Letters | 2011

Chiral metamaterial composed of three-dimensional plasmonic nanostructures.

Christian Helgert; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Matthias Falkner; Christoph Menzel; Carsten Rockstuhl; Ernst-Bernhard Kley; Andreas Tünnermann; Falk Lederer; Thomas Pertsch

We introduce a top-down fabricated metamaterial composed of three-dimensional, chiral, plasmonic nanostructures for visible and near-infrared wavelengths. Based on a combined spectroscopic and interferometric characterization, the entire complex transmission response in terms of a Jones matrix is disclosed. Particularly, the polarization output state of light after propagation through the nanostructures can be decoded from the measurements for any excitation configuration. We experimentally found a rotation of the polarization azimuth of linearly polarized light exceeding 50° at wavelengths around 1.08 μm. This corresponds to a specific rotation which is significantly larger than that of any linear, passive, and reciprocal medium reported to date.


Optics Express | 2005

Microoptical telescope compound eye

Jacques Duparré; Peter Schreiber; Andre Matthes; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Andreas Bräuer; Andreas Tünnermann; Reinhard Völkel; Martin Eisner; Toralf Scharf

A new optical concept for compact digital image acquisition devices with large field of view is developed and proofed experimentally. Archetypes for the imaging system are compound eyes of small insects and the Gabor-Superlens. A paraxial 3x3 matrix formalism is used to describe the telescope arrangement of three microlens arrays with different pitch to find first order parameters of the imaging system. A 2mm thin imaging system with 21x3 channels, 70 masculinex10 masculine field of view and 4.5mm x 0.5mm image size is optimized and analyzed using sequential and non-sequential raytracing and fabricated by microoptics technology. Anamorphic lenses, where the parameters are a function of the considered optical channel, are used to achieve a homogeneous optical performance over the whole field of view. Captured images are presented and compared to simulation results.


Nanotechnology | 2011

Single and multilayer metamaterials fabricated by nanoimprint lithography

Iris Bergmair; Babak Dastmalchi; M Bergmair; A Saeed; W Hilber; G Hesser; Christian Helgert; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Thomas Pertsch; Ernst-Bernhard Kley; Uwe Hübner; Nian-Hai Shen; R. S. Penciu; Maria Kafesaki; Costas M. Soukoulis; Kurt Hingerl; Michael Muehlberger; R Schoeftner

We demonstrate for the first time a fast and easy nanoimprint lithography (NIL) based stacking process of negative index structures like fishnet and Swiss-cross metamaterials. The process takes a few seconds, is cheap and produces three-dimensional (3D) negative index materials (NIMs) on a large area which is suitable for mass production. It can be performed on all common substrates even on flexible plastic foils. This work is therefore an important step toward novel and breakthrough applications of NIMs such as cloaking devices, perfect lenses and magnification of objects using NIM prisms. The optical properties of the fabricated samples were measured by means of transmission and reflection spectroscopy. From the measured data we retrieved the effective refractive index which is shown to be negative for a wavelength around 1.8 µm for the fishnet metamaterial while the Swiss-cross metamaterial samples show a distinct resonance at wavelength around 1.4 µm.


Optics Express | 2007

The origin of magnetic polarizability in metamaterials at optical frequencies - an electrodynamic approach

Carsten Rockstuhl; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; J. Petschulat; A. Chipouline; J. Kuhl; Thomas Pertsch; Harald Giessen; Falk Lederer

We explain the origin of the electric and particular the magnetic polarizabiltiy of metamaterials employing a fully electromagnetic plasmonic picture. As example we study an U-shaped split-ring resonator based metamaterial at optical frequencies. The relevance of the split-ring resonator orientation relative to the illuminating field for obtaining a strong magnetic response is outlined. We reveal higher-order magnetic resonances and explain their origin on the basis of higher-order plasmonic eigenmodes caused by an appropriate current flow in the split-ring resonator. Finally, the conditions required for obtaining a negative index at optical frequencies in a metamaterial consisting of split-ring resonators and wires are investigated.


Nano Letters | 2013

Deep-subwavelength plasmonic nanoresonators exploiting extreme coupling.

Rasoul Alaee; Christoph Menzel; Uwe Huebner; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Shakeeb Bin Hasan; Thomas Pertsch; Carsten Rockstuhl; Falk Lederer

A metal-insulator-metal (MIM) waveguide is a canonical structure used in many functional plasmonic devices. Recently, research on nanoresonantors made from finite, that is, truncated, MIM waveguides attracted a considerable deal of interest motivated by the promise for many applications. However, most suggested nanoresonators do not reach a deep-subwavelength domain. With ordinary fabrication techniques the dielectric spacers usually remain fairly thick, that is, in the order of tens of nanometers. This prevents the wavevector of the guided surface plasmon polariton to strongly deviate from the light line. Here, we will show that the exploitation of an extreme coupling regime, which appears for only a few nanometers thick dielectric spacer, can lift this limitation. By taking advantage of atomic layer deposition we fabricated and characterized exemplarily deep-subwavelength perfect absorbers. Our results are fully supported by numerical simulations and analytical considerations. Our work provides impetus on many fields of nanoscience and will foster various applications in high-impact areas such as metamaterials, light harvesting, and sensing or the fabrication of quantum-plasmonic devices.


Nature Communications | 2016

Magnetic hyperbolic optical metamaterials

Sergey Kruk; Zi Jing Wong; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Kevin J. O'Brien; Dragomir N. Neshev; Yuri S. Kivshar; Xiang Zhang

Strongly anisotropic media where the principal components of electric permittivity or magnetic permeability tensors have opposite signs are termed as hyperbolic media. Such media support propagating electromagnetic waves with extremely large wave vectors exhibiting unique optical properties. However, in all artificial and natural optical materials studied to date, the hyperbolic dispersion originates solely from the electric response. This restricts material functionality to one polarization of light and inhibits free-space impedance matching. Such restrictions can be overcome in media having components of opposite signs for both electric and magnetic tensors. Here we present the experimental demonstration of the magnetic hyperbolic dispersion in three-dimensional metamaterials. We measure metamaterial isofrequency contours and reveal the topological phase transition between the elliptic and hyperbolic dispersion. In the hyperbolic regime, we demonstrate the strong enhancement of thermal emission, which becomes directional, coherent and polarized. Our findings show the possibilities for realizing efficient impedance-matched hyperbolic media for unpolarized light.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2010

Experimental determination of the dispersion relation of light in metamaterials by white-light interferometry

Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Frank Setzpfandt; Christian Helgert; Uwe Hübner; Christoph Menzel; A. Chipouline; Carsten Rockstuhl; Andreas Tünnermann; Falk Lederer; Thomas Pertsch

We present a method to experimentally measure the complex reflection and transmission coefficients of optical waves at metamaterials under normal incidence. This allows us to determine their pertinent dispersion relation without resorting to numerical simulations. For this purpose we employ a spectrometer and a white light interferometer for amplitude and phase measurements, respectively. To demonstrate the reliability of the method, it is applied to two referential metamaterial geometries, namely, the fishnet and the double-element structure. Involved aspects of the phase measurements as well as the accuracy of the method are discussed.


Optics Letters | 2009

Double-element metamaterial with negative index at near-infrared wavelengths

Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Uwe Hübner; Christoph Menzel; Christian Helgert; A. Chipouline; Carsten Rockstuhl; Andreas Tünnermann; Falk Lederer; Thomas Pertsch

We present the realization of a metamaterial that combines double cut wires and continuous wires in its unit cell. This double-element geometry together with the applied layer-by-layer fabrication technique permits an independent tuning of the geometry of the unit-cell components. The characterization of the samples is based on the measurement of transmission and reflection spectra combined with rigorous numerical simulations. The results show that the metamaterial exhibits an effective refractive index of n=-0.5+1.9i at the wavelength lambda=2.1 microm.


Optics Letters | 2012

Genuine effectively biaxial left-handed metamaterials due to extreme coupling

Christoph Menzel; Rasoul Alaee; Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Christian Helgert; A. Chipouline; Carsten Rockstuhl; Thomas Pertsch; Falk Lederer

Most left-handed metamaterials cannot be described by local effective permittivity or permeability tensors in the visible or near-infrared due to the mesoscopic size of the respective unit cells and the related strong spatial dispersion. We lift this problem and propose a metamaterial exhibiting artificial magnetism that does not suffer from this restriction. The artificial magnetism arises from the extreme coupling between both metallic films forming the unit cell. We show that its electromagnetic response can be properly described by biaxial local constitutive relations. A genuine biaxial left-handed fishnet metamaterial is suggested, which can be realized by atomic layer deposition to fabricate the nanoscaled spacing layers required for extreme coupling.


Optics Express | 2011

Optical properties of metamaterials based on asymmetric double-wire structures

Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; A. Chipouline; J. Petschulat; Uwe Hübner; Thünnerman A; Thomas Pertsch

We performed theoretical and experimental investigations of the magnetic properties of metamaterials based on asymmetric double-wire structures. Using the multipole model for the description of metamaterials, we investigated the influence of the geometrical asymmetry of the structure on the macroscopic effective parameters. The results show that the larger wire in the system dominates the dynamics of the structure and defines the orientation and the strength of the microscopic currents. As a result the magnetization of the structure can be significantly enhanced for certain asymmetric configurations of the double-wire structure.

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A. Chipouline

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Carsten Rockstuhl

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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