Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Broadband Multifocal Conic-Shaped Metalens

357   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Yanjun Bao
 Publication date 2016
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

Multifocal lens, which focus incident light at multiple foci, are widely used in imaging systems and optical communications. However, for the traditional design strategy, it combines several lenses that have different focal points into a planar integrated unit, resulting a low imaging quality due to the high background noise. Here, we propose two kinds of multifocal metalens with Au nanoslits arranged in an elliptical and a hyperbolic shape, which are able to effectively focus incident light at all of the foci with constructive interference, and extremely decrease the background noise and improve the lens imaging performance at the nanoscale. We further demonstrate that, the proposed metalens can possess a broadband operation wavelength changed from 600 nm to 900 nm, with its dual-polarity actively controlled by the incident circular polarization lights. With great agreement between the experimental and simulation results, our proposed conic-shaped metalens provides a significant potential for the future integrated nanophotonic device.



rate research

Read More

Recently, metalenses which consist of metasurface arrays, have attracted attention due to their more condensed size in comparison with conventional lenses. In this paper, we propose a reconfigurable coding metasurface hybridized with vanadium dioxide (VO2) for wavefront manipulation at terahertz (THz) frequencies. At room temperature, the unit-cell can reflect as a 1 bit under linearly y polarized illuminated waves. Besides, when the temperature is increased, VO2 would be in a fully metallic state; therefore, unit-cell can act as a 0 reflection phase. Furthermore, by changing the unit-cells arrangements on a metalens surface, the proposed device can focus the incident beam at any position according to a particular design. Numerical simulations demonstrate that the designed VO2-assisted metasurface can generate one and multi-focal spot in reflection mode as expected. Also, theoretical results depict an excellent agreement with obtained simulation results. The presented metalens has notable potential in THz high-resolution imaging and optical coding.
Metasurface lenses, namely metalenses, are ultrathin planar nanostructures that are capable of manipulating the properties of incoming light and imparting lens-like wavefront to the output. Although they have shown promising potentials for the future miniaturization of optics, the chromatic aberration inherited from their diffractive nature plagues them towards many practical applications. Current solutions for creating achromatic metalenses usually require searching through a large number of meta-atoms to find designs that fulfill not only phase but phase dispersion requirements, which leads to intensive design efforts. Besides, most designs are based on regular-shaped antennas driven by the designers intuition and experience, hence only cover a limited design space. Here, we present an inverse design approach that efficiently produces meta-atoms with unintuitive geometries required for broadband achromatic metalenses. We restricted the generated shapes to hold four-fold reflectional symmetry so that the resulting metalenses are polarization insensitive. In addition, meta-atoms generated by our method inheritably have round edges and corners, which make them nanofabrication-friendly. Our experimental characterization shows that our metalenses exhibit superior performance over a broad bandwidth of 465 nm in the near-infrared regime. Our method offers a fast and efficient way of designing high-performance achromatic metalenses and sheds new insights for unintuitive design of other metaphotonic devices.
Multifocal plane microscopy (MUM) allows three dimensional objects to be imaged in a single camera frame. Our approach uses dual orthogonal diffraction phase gratings with a quadratic distortion of the lines to apply defocus to the first diffraction orders which, when paired with a relay lens, allows for 9 focal planes to be imaged on a single camera chip. This approach requires a strong signal level to ensure sufficient intensity in the diffracted light, but has the advantage of being compact and straightforward to implement. As the microscope begins to focus deeper into the sample, aberrations caused by refractive index mismatch and inhomogeneity in the samples media have an adverse effect on the signals quality. In this paper, we investigate the image quality improvement brought by applying adaptive optics (AO) to multifocal plane microscopy. A single correction device (an 8x8 deformable mirror (DM)) is combined with an image-based AO control strategy to perform the correction of optical aberrations. We compare full end-to-end modelling results using an established numerical modelling system adapted for microscopy to laboratory results both on a test sample and on a number of biological samples. Finally, we will demonstrate that combining AO and MUM, we are able to improve the image quality of biological samples and provide a good correction throughout the volume of the biological sample.
Optical metasurfaces have shown to be a powerful approach to planar optical elements, enabling an unprecedented control over light phase and amplitude. At that stage, where wide variety of static functionalities have been accomplished, most efforts are being directed towards achieving reconfigurable optical elements. Here, we present our approach to an electrically controlled varifocal metalens operating in the visible frequency range. It relies on dynamically controlling the refractive index environment of a silicon metalens by means of an electric resistor embedded into a thermo-optical polymer. We demonstrate precise and continuous tuneability of the focal length and achieve focal length variation larger than the Rayleigh length for voltage as small as 12 volts. The system time-response is of the order of 100 ms, with the potential to be reduced with further integration. Finally, the imaging capability of our varifocal metalens is successfully validated in an optical microscopy setting. Compared to conventional bulky reconfigurable lenses, the presented technology is a lightweight and compact solution, offering new opportunities for miniaturized smart imaging devices.
Metasurfaces enable a new paradigm of controlling electromagnetic waves by manipulating subwavelength artificial structures within just a fraction of wavelength. Despite the rapid growth, simultaneously achieving low-dimensionality, high transmission efficiency, real-time continuous reconfigurability, and a wide variety of re-programmable functions are still very challenging, forcing researchers to realize just one or few of the aforementioned features in one design. In this study, we report a subwavelength reconfigurable Huygens metasurface realized by loading it with controllable active elements. Our proposed design provides a unified solution to the aforementioned challenges of real-time local reconfigurability of efficient Huygens metasurfaces. As one exemplary demonstration, we experimentally realized a reconfigurable metalens at the microwave frequencies which, to our best knowledge, demonstrates for the first time that multiple and complex focal spots can be controlled simultaneously at distinct spatial positions and re-programmable in any desired fashion, with fast response time and high efficiency. The presented active Huygens metalens may offer unprecedented potentials for real-time, fast, and sophisticated electromagnetic wave manipulation such as dynamic holography, focusing, beam shaping/steering, imaging and active emission control.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا