Dark Lines and Polarization Singularities in Bright Metasurface‐Enhanced Fluorescence

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DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lpor.202402199
Reference D. Pal and A.F. Koenderink, Dark Lines and Polarization Singularities in Bright Metasurface‐Enhanced Fluorescence, Laser & Photonics Rev., e02199: 1-15 (2025)
Group Resonant Nanophotonics

2D scattering lattices can turn incoherent emitter ensembles into bright, spatially coherent sources, a well-established concept in thermal emission control and solid-state lighting communities. Here, a surprising phenomenon is reported: networks of sharp dark lines and polarization singularities in momentum space, observed alongside the usual bright light extraction features of plasmon antenna lattices optimized for extracting light from fluorophores in a 2D waveguide. Using Fourier microscopy with Stokes polarimetry, supported by reciprocity-based T-matrix calculations, these unexpected features are traced to destructive far-field interference between transverse electric (TE) and transverse magnetic (TM) waveguide modes, diffractively coupled through the meta-atoms. Remarkably, these modes generate strong elliptical far-field polarization signatures, with cancellations leading to polarization singularities such as L-lines, V-points, and C-points, analogous to those observed in the incoherent sunlight field in the sky.