The magnetic properties of a material can affect how it interacts with light. (Image: Ihar Faniayeu/University of Gothenburg)

A new approach has allowed researchers at Aalto University to design a kind of metamaterial that has so far been beyond the reach of existing technologies. Unlike natural materials, metamaterials and metasurfaces can be tailored to have specific electromagnetic properties, which means scientists can create materials with features desirable for industrial applications.

The new metamaterial takes advantage of the nonreciprocal magneto-electric (NME) effect. The NME effect implies a link between specific properties of the material (its magnetization and polarization) and the different field components of light or other electromagnetic waves. The NME effect is negligible in natural materials, but scientists have been trying to enhance it using metamaterials and metasurfaces because of the technological potential this would unlock.

“So far, the NME effect has not led to realistic industrial applications. Most of the proposed approaches would only work for microwaves and not visible light, and they also couldn’t be fabricated with available technology,” said Shadi Safaei Jazi, a doctoral researcher at Aalto. The team designed an optical NME metamaterial that can be created with existing technology, using conventional materials and nanofabrication techniques.

The new material opens up applications that would otherwise need a strong external magnetic field to work — for example, creating truly one-way glass. Glass that’s currently sold as ‘one-way’ is just semi-transparent, letting light through in both directions. When the brightness is different between the two sides (for example, inside and outside a window), it acts like one-way glass. But an NME-based one-way glass wouldn’t need a difference in brightness because light could only go through it in one direction.

“Just imagine having a window with that glass in your house, office, or car. Regardless of the brightness outside, people wouldn’t be able to see anything inside, while you would enjoy a perfect view from your window,” said Safaei. If the technology succeeds, this one-way glass could also make solar cells more efficient by blocking the thermal emissions that existing cells radiate back toward the sun, which reduces the amount of energy they capture.

The research was published in Nature Communications on February 12, 2024.

For more information, contact Shadi Safaei Jazi at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..