Moiré metasurfaces with tunable near-infrared-I chiroptical responses for biomolecular chirality discrimination†
Abstract
Manipulating circular dichroism in chiral metasurfaces has been increasingly important for a wide range of polarization-sensitive photonic applications. However, simple methods for presenting chiral nanostructures with tunable and considerable chiroptical responses in the near-infrared-I regime remains underexplored. Herein, two sheets of suspended symmetric bilayer metagratings fabricated via single-step electron beam lithography are stacked into a moirĂ© metasurface with its circular dichroism value reaching up to 20.9°. The chirality of the moirĂ© metasurface can be fully tuned in terms of both its sign and magnitude by adjusting the in-plane angle between the two twisted sheets of metagratings. The multilayered design is accessible to the coupling of hybridized plasmons for governing the chiroptical properties in the near-infrared-I regime. The ratio between the resonance wavelength and the grating period is about 1.65, which is much lower compared to that in most existing moirĂ© metasurfaces with strong chiroptical responses. Furthermore, the superchiral fields in the inter-sheet region are further exploited for label-free enantiodiscrimination with ultrahigh sensitivity of 10.17 nm fmol−1 mm2. The proposed moirĂ© metasurfaces with strong near-infrared-I chirality hold great potential for supporting polarization engineering and biomolecular detection, paving a way for advanced applications in medical diagnosis, biomedical imaging, and display technologies.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Chiral Nanomaterials