Micro, Nano, and Molecular Systems Article 2006

Chiral molecules split light: Reflection and refraction in a chiral liquid

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A light beam changes direction as it enters a liquid at an angle from another medium, such as air. Should the liquid contain molecules that lack mirror symmetry, then it has been predicted by Fresnel that the light beam will not only change direction, but will actually split into two separate beams with a small difference in the respective angles of refraction. Here we report the observation of this phenomenon. We also demonstrate that the angle of reflection does not equal the angle of incidence in a chiral medium. Unlike conventional optical rotation, which depends on the path-length through the sample, the reported reflection and refraction phenomena arise within a few wavelengths at the interface and thereby suggest a new approach to polarimetry that can be used in microfluidic volumes. <p> Featured highlight ‘Fundamental optical physics: Refraction’ Nature Photonics, Nov. 2006. <p>

Author(s): Ghosh, Ambarish and Fischer, Peer
Journal: PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume: 97
Number (issue): 17
Year: 2006
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.173002
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive
Note: Featured highlight ‘Fundamental optical physics: Refraction’ Nature Photonics, Nov. 2006.

BibTex

@article{ISI:000241586800027,
  title = {Chiral molecules split light: Reflection and refraction in a chiral liquid},
  journal = {PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS},
  abstract = {A light beam changes direction as it enters a liquid at an angle from another medium, such as air. Should the liquid contain molecules that lack mirror symmetry, then it has been predicted by Fresnel that the light beam will not only change direction, but will actually split into two separate beams with a small difference in the respective angles of refraction. Here we report the observation of this phenomenon. We also demonstrate that the angle of reflection does not equal the angle of incidence in a chiral medium. Unlike conventional optical rotation, which depends on the path-length through the sample, the reported reflection and refraction phenomena arise within a few wavelengths at the interface and thereby suggest a new approach to polarimetry that can be used in microfluidic volumes.
  <p>
  Featured highlight ‘Fundamental optical physics: Refraction’ Nature Photonics, Nov. 2006.
  <p>},
  volume = {97},
  number = {17},
  year = {2006},
  note = {Featured highlight ‘Fundamental optical physics: Refraction’ Nature Photonics, Nov. 2006.},
  slug = {isi-000241586800027},
  author = {Ghosh, Ambarish and Fischer, Peer}
}