Such a gatekeeper would enable powerful and unique capabilities in a wide range of electronic, optical and other applications, including those that rely on transistors or other components that switch on and off.
The discovery by researchers at the University at Buffalo in the US has to do with materials that are periodic, which means that they are made up of parts or units that repeat.
Crystals fall into this category, as do certain parts of the wings of butterflies, whose periodic structure helps give them colour by reflecting specific colours of light.
Such materials can reflect light, as butterfly wings do, and if you understand the internal structure of a periodic material, you can use an equation called Bragg's law to determine which wavelengths will pass through the material, and which will be blocked due to reflection.
More From This Section
The new study shows that a completely periodic material structure is not needed for this kind of predictable reflection to take place.
Similar effects occur when you sandwich a non-periodic material between two boundary layers of material that have a periodic shape.
The effect not only applies to light waves, but rather to a broad range of wave phenomena that span the quantum to the continuum scale.
"We have shown that Bragg's law is a special case of a more generalised phenomenon that was discovered in this study and named as a Bloch wave resonance," said Victor A Pogrebnyak, professor at University at Buffalo.
"This discovery opens up new opportunities in photonics, nanoelectronics, optics and acoustics and many other areas of science and technology that exploit band gap wave phenomena for practical use," said Pogrebnyak.
Bloch wave resonance enables the blocking of a larger range of wavelengths simultaneously.
Applications that could take advantage of this broader "band gap" range include white light lasers and a new type of fast-switching transistor.
The study was published in the journal Physical Review Letters.