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The conventional lenss tunability drawback always restricts their application compared to the metasurface lens (metalens). On the other side, reconfigurable metalenses offer the benefits of ultrathin thickness and capable of tunability. Therefore achieving reconfigurable functionalities in a single metasurface has attracted significant research interest for potential terahertz (THz) applications. In this paper, an adjustable metasurface is presented using Vanadium dioxide (VO2) to manipulate the electromagnetic waves and provide the full reflection phase. The phase-change metasurface is composed of a VO2 nanofilm, a silicon spacer, and a gold layer embedded in the structures bottom. By employing the reconfigurable metasurface with the specific phase distribution, the incident beam can converge to determined points in any arbitrary manner, including the number of the focal points, focal points location, and power intensity ratio. Numerical simulations demonstrate that the proposed reconfigurable metasurface can concentrate power on one or more than one focal point in reflection modes as expected. Additionally, the VO2-based metasurface can control concentration width in a real-time manner using a novel proposed method. The simulation and theoretical results are in good agreement to verify the validity and feasibility of 2-bit metalens design, which has considerable potential in wireless high-speed communication and super-resolution imaging.
Varifocal lenses are essential components of dynamic optical systems with applications in photography, mixed reality, and microscopy. Metasurface optics has strong potential for creating tunable flat optics. Existing tunable metalenses, however, typi
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
The ability to manipulate the electric-field vector of broadband terahertz waves is essential for applications of terahertz technologies in many areas, and can open up new possibilities for nonlinear terahertz spectroscopy and coherent control. Here,
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
Fingerprint spectral response of several materials with terahertz electromagnetic radiation indicates that terahertz technology is an effective tool for sensing applications. However, sensing few nanometer thin-film of dielectrics with much longer te