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Large-area metasurfaces composed of discrete wavelength-scale scatterers present an extremely large number of degrees of freedom to engineer an optical element. These degrees of freedom provide tremendous design flexibility, and a central challenge in metasurface design is how to optimally leverage these degrees of freedom towards a desired optical function. Inverse design can be used to explore non-intuitive design space for metasurfaces. We report an inverse design method exploiting T-Matrix scattering of ellipsoidal scatterer based metasurfaces. Multifunctional, polarization multiplexed metasurfaces were designed using this approach. Finally, we apply this method to optimize the efficiency of an existing high numerical aperture (0.83)metalens design, and report an increase in efficiency from 26% to 32%
The classical adjoint-based topology optimization (TO) method, based on the use of a random continuous dielectric function as an adjoint variable distribution, is known to be one of the most efficient optimization methods that enable the design of op
Predicting the optical response of macroscopic arrangements of individual scatterers is a computational challenge, as the problem involves length scales across multiple orders of magnitude. We present a full-wave optical method to highly efficiently
Inverse design of large-area metasurfaces can potentially exploit the full parameter space that such devices offer and achieve highly efficient multifunctional flat optical elements. However, since practically useful flat optics elements are large in
The development of inverse design, where computational optimization techniques are used to design devices based on certain specifications, has led to the discovery of many compact, non-intuitive structures with superior performance. Among various met
We present a digitized adjoint method for realizing efficient inverse design of digital subwavelength nanophotonic devices. We design a single-mode 3-dB power divider and a dual-mode demultiplexer to demonstrate the digitized adjoint method for singl