Multipolar origin of bound states in the continuum

Abstract
Metasurfaces based on resonant subwavelength photonic structures enable novel methods of wavefront control and light focusing, underpinning a new generation of flat-optics devices. Recently emerged all-dielectric metasurfaces exhibit high-quality resonances underpinned by the physics of bound states in the continuum that drives many interesting concepts in photonics. Here we suggest an approach to explain the physics of bound photonic states embedded in the radiation continuum. We study dielectric metasurfaces composed of planar periodic arrays of Mie-resonant nanoparticles (“meta-atoms”) which support both symmetry protected and accidental bound states in the continuum, and employ the multipole decomposition approach to reveal the physical mechanism of the formation of such nonradiating states in terms of multipolar modes generated by isolated meta-atoms. Based on the symmetry of the vector spherical harmonics, we identify the conditions for the existence of bound states in the continuum originating from the symmetries of both the lattice and the unit cell. Using this formalism we predict that metasurfaces with strongly suppressed spatial dispersion can support the bound states in the continuum with the wave vectors forming a line in the reciprocal space. Our results provide a method for designing high-quality resonant photonic systems based on the physics of bound states in the continuum.
Funding Information
  • Russian Foundation for Basic Research (19-02-00419, 18-02-01206)
  • Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation (3.1668.2017/4.6, 3.8891.2017/8.9)
  • Council on grants of the President of the Russian Federation (MK-403.2018.2)
  • Australian National University
  • Foundation for the Advancement of Theoretical Physics and Mathematics