“…However, studies on non-Hermitian photonics have shown that loss and gain, satisfied with PT symmetry, provide a new degree of freedom for the system, which can effectively control photons and generate new optical effects, such as unidirectional reflectionless resonance, which can be used to prepare chip-level semiconductor lasers [48].Anti-PT-symmetric systems, in which the refractive index of material obeys n(x) = −n*(−x), have been proposed and attracted much attention [49][50][51]. Many interesting phenomena are found in anti-PT-symmetric systems, such as flat broadband light transport [50], and chiral mode conversion [52]. Actually, anti-PT symmetry belongs to a more fundamental symmetry called charge-conjugation symmetry [53,54], which consists of two sublattices.…”