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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2015/05/01/amolf-researchers-publish-highlights-of-nanophotonics-in-science/

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April 19th 2025
22:05:18

In recent years nanophotonics has become a vibrant field of research, as scientists and engineers master the flow of light at length scales far below the optical wavelength, largely surpassing the classical limits imposed by diffraction. Using metallic and dielectric nanostructures precisely sculpted into 2D and 3D nano-architectures, light can be scattered, refracted, confined, filtered, and processed in fascinating new ways. This is impossible to achieve with natural materials and in conventional geometries. Control over light at the nanoscale has not only unveiled a plethora of new phenomena, but has also led to a variety of important applications.

AMOLF has been active in this new research field from its very beginning, and has helped shape it over the years. Currently, over fifty PhD students, postdocs and master students are active in AMOLF’s Center for Nanophotonics, working on a broad range of nanophotonics topics. The review article, published in Science on 1 May, describes scientific highlights of research groups all over the world in plasmonics, two-dimensional materials, optical antennas, quantum plasmonics, light vector fields, metamaterials and metasurfaces. It also draws attention to nanophotonics applications   that have been developed in the past years, such as photonic crystal lasers, LEDs, solar cells, medical applications. The article concludes with a perspective of the direction in which the nanophotonics research field is evolving, describing challenges in hybrid nanophotonics, energy harvesting, nanophotonic control over chemical reactions, optical computing and opto-electronic integration. In the authors’ vision, there is no doubt that the intense ongoing research activity in nanophotonics will lead to novel fundamental insights in the science of light and its applications in the years to come. The timing of the paper is   ideal, since this year we celebrate the International Year of Light.

Reference
Nanophotonics: shrinking light-based technology, A.F. Koenderink, A. Alù, and A. Polman, Science 347, 1 May 2015

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