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Home NEWS Science News Technology

Quasi-BIC Metasurfaces Boost Rapid Localized Singlet-Oxygen

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 3, 2026
in Technology
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Quasi-BIC Metasurfaces Boost Rapid Localized Singlet-Oxygen
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In a groundbreaking advance that promises to redefine the horizons of photonics and chemical synthesis, a team of researchers has unveiled a novel class of metasurfaces engineered to harness quasi-bound states in the continuum (quasi-BIC) for the rapid, spatially selective generation of singlet oxygen. This remarkable innovation, as outlined by Long, Lin, Qi, et al., published in the April 2026 issue of Light: Science & Applications, epitomizes the confluence of nanophotonics, materials science, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) chemistry, offering transformative potential across medical therapies, environmental remediation, and energy technologies.

At the core of this discovery lies the sophisticated manipulation of light-matter interactions at subwavelength scales facilitated by quasi-BIC metasurfaces. These metasurfaces operate by sustaining electromagnetic modes that reside at the cusp of the continuum spectrum, with radiation losses effectively suppressed by symmetry-breaking perturbations. Such engineering confers extraordinarily high optical quality (Q) factors, crucial for amplifying the local electromagnetic field and thereby dramatically enhancing photochemical processes. Singlet oxygen (^1O_2), a highly reactive oxygen species with pivotal roles in cell signaling, photodynamic therapy, and oxidative degradation, has historically presented challenges in generation and localization—a barrier now surmounted by these meta-architectures.

The research team meticulously designed two-dimensional arrays of resonators, each geometry sculpted to break inherent symmetries and thereby evoke quasi-BIC modes tunable across relevant photonic bands. By finely adjusting geometric asymmetry, they achieved an unprecedented balance where radiation leakage was minimized without sacrificing optical accessibility. This fine control of the resonance landscape enabled the generation of intense near-fields, which, when exposed to photosensitizer molecules or oxygen directly, facilitated the efficient excitation and transfer of energy to molecular oxygen, producing singlet oxygen at rates orders of magnitude higher than conventional methods.

Characterization of these metasurfaces incorporated advanced spectroscopic methods and microscopic reactive oxygen species mapping, revealing highly localized, rapid singlet oxygen generation within nanometric domains. Notably, the spatial confinement of these reactions was validated by employing chemical probes sensitive exclusively to singlet oxygen, underscoring the precise manipulation of photochemical reactivity without collateral photodamage to surrounding matrices. This degree of control paves the way for integrating such devices into biomedical implants or environmental sensors where ROS can be produced on demand with minimal invasiveness.

Beyond the purely photonic design, the study explored how material selection influences overall functionality. Utilization of high-refractive-index dielectric materials minimized intrinsic losses while supporting robust electric and magnetic dipolar resonances essential for BIC formation. Moreover, the spectral response of these metasurfaces could be tailored across the visible to near-infrared regimes, aligning with the absorption spectra of commonly used photosensitizers and expanding compatibility with diverse practical applications.

One of the most striking aspects of this technology is its speed and efficiency in singlet oxygen production. According to the reported data, the generation rates achieved via quasi-BIC metasurfaces outperformed traditional photosensitized reactions by several fold, substantially reducing the illumination intensity and exposure times necessary for effective outcomes. This acceleration may enable safer photodynamic therapies, where prolonged light exposure has previously limited applicability due to tissue heating or off-target effects.

The study further emphasizes the versatility of the quasi-BIC metasurfaces in modulating the temporal dynamics of singlet oxygen generation. By tuning resonator parameters and exploiting interference effects, the researchers could achieve pulsed or continuous ROS generation regimes, potentially enabling dynamic control in therapeutic or synthetic environments. Such adaptability is invaluable for tailored treatments or chemical processes demanding precise timing and dosage of reactive species.

Crucially, the environmental stability and reusability of these metasurfaces were demonstrated through repeated singlet oxygen generation cycles without significant degradation in performance. This robustness underscores the practicality of deploying quasi-BIC metasurfaces in real-world settings where durability and consistent functionality are paramount. Integrating these structures with microfluidic platforms or implantable devices could usher in a new era of responsive and maintenance-free photochemical reaction systems.

The implications of this work extend deeply into nanophotonics research, inspiring further exploration of quasi-BIC phenomena for catalysis, sensing, and energy conversion. The ability to concentrate electromagnetic energy into subwavelength volumes with high Q factors while maintaining accessibility through controlled symmetry-breaking opens avenues for numerous light-driven chemical transformations previously deemed inefficient or unmanageable.

From a medical perspective, the swift and localized singlet oxygen generation may revolutionize photodynamic therapy protocols, enhancing therapeutic efficacy against tumors, microbial infections, or pathological tissues while minimizing side effects. This is particularly impactful given the growing clinical demand for non-invasive, highly targeted treatments and the limitations of current photosensitizers constrained by diffusion and activation threshold issues.

Furthermore, the environmental applications are equally compelling. Singlet oxygen functions as a potent oxidant in the degradation of organic pollutants and pathogens. The ability to generate this species rapidly and locally on metasurfaces could leverage sunlight or artificial light sources for water purification, air quality enhancement, and sterilization processes with greater energy efficiency and reduced chemical waste.

By bridging fundamental photonics and applied chemistry, the research by Long and colleagues illuminates a pathway toward sustainable, highly controlled generation of reactive oxygen species. The findings encourage the pursuit of hybrid systems coupling these metasurfaces with novel photosensitizers and functional materials to harness synergistic effects, possibly unlocking performance levels unattainable by current technologies.

In conclusion, the advent of quasi-BIC metasurfaces marks a paradigm shift in controlling singlet oxygen chemistry via photonics. The ability to induce rapid, localized, and tunable reactive species production through engineered nanostructures sets a new benchmark for innovation at the intersection of light and matter. As this field accelerates, the prospective applications spanning medicine, environmental science, and energy conversion promise to capture global research and industrial interest, heralding a new chapter of precision photochemistry driven by the elegant physics of quasi-bound states in the continuum.

Subject of Research: Quasi-bound states in the continuum (quasi-BIC) metasurfaces for enhanced singlet oxygen generation.

Article Title: Quasi-BIC metasurfaces enable rapid, localized singlet-oxygen generation.

Article References:
Long, R., Lin, L., Qi, X. et al. Quasi-BIC metasurfaces enable rapid, localized singlet-oxygen generation. Light Sci Appl 15, 188 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-026-02267-9

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: 10.1038/s41377-026-02267-9

Keywords: Quasi-bound states in the continuum, metasurfaces, singlet oxygen, reactive oxygen species, photochemistry, photodynamic therapy, nanophotonics, optical resonators, high-Q factor, symmetry breaking, dielectric materials, localized light-matter interaction

Tags: advanced materials for energy technologieselectromagnetic mode engineeringhigh-Q factor photonic resonatorslight-matter interaction at subwavelength scalesmetasurface-enabled environmental remediationnanophotonics for reactive oxygen speciesphotodynamic therapy enhancementquasi-bound states in the continuum metasurfacesrapid localized singlet oxygen generationsinglet oxygen in chemical synthesisspatially selective photochemical processessymmetry-breaking in optical metasurfaces

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