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In the latest years the optical engineers toolbox has welcomed a new concept, the metasurface. In a metasurface, properly tailored material inclusions are able to reshape the electromagnetic field of an incident beam. Change of amplitude, phase and polarization can be addressed within a thickness of only a fraction of a wavelength. By means of this concept, a radical gain in compactness of optical components is foreseen, even of the most complex ones; other unique features like that of analog computing have also been identified. With this huge potential ready to be disclosed, lack of tunability is still a main barrier to be broken. Metasurfaces must now be made reconfigurable, i.e. able to modify and memorize their state, possibly with a small amount of energy. In this Communication we report low-energy, self-holding metasurface reconfiguration through lithium intercalation in a vanadium pentoxide layer integrated within the photonic device. By a proper meta-atom design, operation on amplitude and phase of linearly polarized light has been demonstrated. In addition, manipulation of circularly polarized light in the form of tunable chirality and tunable handedness-preserving reflection has been implemented. These operations are accomplished using as low as 50 pJ/{mu}m^{2}, raising lithium intercalation in transition metal oxides as one of the most energy efficient self-holding tuning mechanisms known so far for metasurfaces, with significant perspectives in the whole field of nanophotonics.
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) is vital to form various chiral spin textures, novel behaviors of magnons and permits their potential applications in energy-efficient spintronic devices. Here, we realize a sizable bulk DMI in a transition met
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are known to support complex excitonic states. Revealing the differences in relaxation dynamics among different excitonic species and elucidating the transition dynamics between them may provide important guide
We investigate the effects of lithium intercalation in twisted bilayers of graphene, using first-principles electronic structure calculations. To model this system we employ commensurate supercells that correspond to twist angles of 7.34$^circ$ and 2
As a storage material for Li-ion batteries, graphene/molybdenum disulfide (Gr/MoS2) composites have been intensively studied in experiments. But the relevant theoretical works from first-principles are lacking. In the current work, van-der-Waals-corr
Lithium metal batteries are seen as a critical piece towards electrifying aviation. During charging, plating of lithium metal, a critical failure mechanism, has been studied and mitigation strategies have been proposed. For electric aircraft, high di