Bio-inspired building blocks for all-organic metamaterials
Article 2024 en
Authors
SN
Sara Núñez‐Sánchez
ML
Martín López‐García
CE
Carla Estévez‐Varela
Abstract
1 min read
Light-harvesting structures in natural photosynthetic organelles, such as those in purple bacteria, consist of light-responsive chromophores in densely packed antennae systems with organized nanostructures. Inspired by these biological systems, we've created organic materials with densely packed J-aggregates in a polymeric matrix, mimicking the optical role of a protein scaffold. These materials exhibit tunable polaritonic properties from visible to infrared. Drawing from the structure of light-harvesting complexes in purple bacteria, we've studied interactions between light and J-aggregate-based nanorings. Electromagnetic simulations show these nanorings act as resonators, confining light beyond subwavelength scales. These findings enable bio-inspired building components for metamaterials spanning the visible to infrared spectrum in an all-organic platform, offering a fresh perspective on nanoscale light-matter interactions in densely packed organic materials in biological organisms, including photosynthetic organelles.
Martín López‐García, Rosalia Serna Galán, Miguel A. Castillo, Sara Núñez‐Sánchez, M. I. Vasilevskiy, Diogo Cunha, Carla Estévez‐Varela, Isabel Pastoriza Santos, William P. Wardley
Wolfgang Porod, Frank S. Werblin, Leon O Chua, Tamás Roska, Á. Rodríguez‐Vázquez, Botond Roska, Patrick Fay, Gary H. Bernstein, Yih-Fang Huang, ÁRPÁD I. CSURGAY
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