ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Subwavelength nanoparticles can support electromagnetic resonances with distinct features depending on their size, shape and nature. For example, electric and magnetic Mie resonances occur in dielectric particles, while plasmonic resonances appear in metals. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that the multipolar resonances hosted by VO2 nanocrystals can be dynamically tuned and switched thanks to the insulator-to-metal transition of VO2. Using both Mie theory and Maxwell Garnett effective medium theory, we retrieve the complex refractive index of the effective medium composed of a slab of VO2 nanospheres embedded in SiO2 and show that such a resulting metamaterial presents distinct optical tunability compared to unpatterned VO2. We further show that this provides a new degree of freedom to design low-loss phase-change metamaterials with designer optical tunability and actively controlled light scattering.
Structural colors generated due to light scattering from static all-dielectric metasurfaces have successfully enabled high-resolution, high-saturation and wide-gamut color printing applications. Despite recent advances, most demonstrations of these s
Since the invention of the laser, adoption of new gain media and device architectures has provided solutions to a variety of applications requiring specific power, size, spectral, spatial, and temporal tunability. Here we introduce a fundamentally ne
Light strongly interacts with structures that are of a similar scale to its wavelength; typically nanoscale features for light in the visible spectrum. However, the optical response of these nanostructures is usually fixed during the fabrication. Pha
Motivated by the recent growing demand in dynamically-controlled flat optics, we take advantage of a hybrid phase-change plasmonic metasurface (MS) to effectively tailor the amplitude, phase, and polarization responses of the incident beam within a u
Despite recent advances in active metaoptics, wide dynamic range combined with high-speed reconfigurable solutions is still elusive. Phase-change materials (PCMs) offer a compelling platform for metasurface optical elements, owing to the large index