Time-varying gradient metasurface with applications in all-optical beam steering

Integrating the large, subpicosecond nonlinear optical response of epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) materials with the broad design freedoms of plasmonic metasurfaces shows potential for creating rapidly modulated optical devices with possible applications in telecommunications, sensing, and reactive beam st...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNanophotonics (Berlin, Germany) Vol. 12; no. 9; pp. 1733 - 1740
Main Authors Karimi, Mohammad, Alam, M. Zahirul, Upham, Jeremy, Reshef, Orad, Boyd, Robert W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin De Gruyter 28.04.2023
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
de Gruyter
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Summary:Integrating the large, subpicosecond nonlinear optical response of epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) materials with the broad design freedoms of plasmonic metasurfaces shows potential for creating rapidly modulated optical devices with possible applications in telecommunications, sensing, and reactive beam steering. In this work, we experimentally investigate a metasurface consisting of a plasmonic gradient array on a thin layer of indium tin oxide (ITO), characterize how incident probe pulses diffract from a system as it is being dynamically modulated by a pump pulse at wavelengths near the ENZ region. Angular shifts in the diffraction orders are observed and can be principally attributed to the adiabatic wavelength conversion of the probe as it witnesses the temporal change of index induced by the pump. Of note, the asymmetric gradient metasurface, considered to be a blazed diffraction grating, shows significantly different dynamic responses for different diffraction orders. The free-space wavelength shift to +1 and −1 diffraction orders is 6 and 12 nm, resulting in steering angle changes of 0.65 and 1.5°, respectively.
Bibliography:USDOE
ISSN:2192-8614
2192-8606
2192-8614
DOI:10.1515/nanoph-2022-0756