Physics & Astronomy10 November 2025

3D Imaging Unveils Sub-Wavelength Light Confinement in Dielectric Nanocavities

Source PublicationNano Letters

Primary AuthorsSeifner, Darket, Babar et al.

Visualisation for: 3D Imaging Unveils Sub-Wavelength Light Confinement in Dielectric Nanocavities
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For a long time, achieving extreme light concentration within volumes smaller than its wavelength was considered the exclusive domain of plasmonic nanostructures. While effective, these metallic structures often suffer from significant energy losses, limiting their potential for certain applications. Dielectric optical cavities, however, have emerged as a promising alternative, capable of concentrating light efficiently without these metallic losses, thereby enabling robust light-matter interactions.

Breaking new ground, a research team has now successfully visualized the intricate three-dimensional profiles of these optical modes within a topology-optimized silicon bowtie nanocavity. Employing multi-orientation electron energy-loss spectroscopy, they conducted direct imaging of the cavity's optical behavior. Subsequent tomographic reconstruction of the collected data sets revealed polarized optical modes in remarkable agreement with theoretical simulations, definitively confirming that a resonance near the telecom wavelength (∼1550 nm) is tightly localized at the bowtie bridge, achieving a deep sub-wavelength mode volume.

This pioneering work not only validates the exceptional light-concentrating capabilities of dielectric nanocavities but also introduces a powerful new analytical tool. As lead author Seifner notes in the paper, "These findings establish electron beam spectroscopy as a powerful tool for mapping three-dimensional field confinement in dielectric photonic cavities with potential applications in future photonic and quantum technologies." This promises more efficient and compact light-based devices.

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Dielectric NanocavitiesSub-wavelength Confinement3D ImagingElectron Spectroscopy