Ultra-High-Efficiency Anomalous Refraction with Dielectric Metasurfaces
Posted on 2018-03-15 - 00:00
Anomalous refraction is a form of
extreme waveform manipulation
that can be realized with artificially structured nanomaterials, such
as metamaterials or metasurfaces. While this phenomenon has been previously
demonstrated for select input and output angles, its generalization
to arbitrary angles with high efficiencies remains a challenge. In
this study, we show that periodic dielectric metasurfaces can support
ultra-high-efficiency anomalous refraction for nearly arbitrary combinations
of incident and outgoing angles (>90% efficiency for angles up
to
50°). Both polarization-dependent and polarization-independent
device configurations can be realized, and the achieved metrics exceed
the capabilities of conventional metasurfaces by a large margin. Many
of the devices studied here utilize dielectric nanostructures that
support strong near-field optical interactions with neighboring structures
and complex optical mode dynamics. We envision that these concepts
can be integrated with practical applications in optical communications,
spectroscopy, and laser optics.
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Sell, David; Yang, Jianji; Wang, Evan W.; Phan, Thaibao; Doshay, Sage; Fan, Jonathan A. (2018). Ultra-High-Efficiency Anomalous Refraction with Dielectric Metasurfaces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsphotonics.8b00183