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Abstract
Surfaces covered by ultrathin plasmonic structures--so-called metasurfaces--have recently
been shown to be capable of completely controlling the phase of light, representing
a new paradigm for the design of innovative optical elements such as ultrathin flat
lenses, directional couplers for surface plasmon polaritons and wave plate vortex
beam generation. Among the various types of metasurfaces, geometric metasurfaces,
which consist of an array of plasmonic nanorods with spatially varying orientations,
have shown superior phase control due to the geometric nature of their phase profile.
Metasurfaces have recently been used to make computer-generated holograms, but the
hologram efficiency remained too low at visible wavelengths for practical purposes.
Here, we report the design and realization of a geometric metasurface hologram reaching
diffraction efficiencies of 80% at 825 nm and a broad bandwidth between 630 nm and
1,050 nm. The 16-level-phase computer-generated hologram demonstrated here combines
the advantages of a geometric metasurface for the superior control of the phase profile
and of reflectarrays for achieving high polarization conversion efficiency. Specifically,
the design of the hologram integrates a ground metal plane with a geometric metasurface
that enhances the conversion efficiency between the two circular polarization states,
leading to high diffraction efficiency without complicating the fabrication process.
Because of these advantages, our strategy could be viable for various practical holographic
applications.
The arbitrary control of electromagnetic waves is a key aim of photonic research. Although, for example, the control of freely propagating waves (PWs) and surface waves (SWs) has separately become possible using transformation optics and metamaterials, a bridge linking both propagation types has not yet been found. Such a device has particular relevance given the many schemes of controlling electromagnetic waves at surfaces and interfaces, leading to trapped rainbows, lensing, beam bending, deflection, and even anomalous reflection/refraction. Here, we demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that a specific gradient-index meta-surface can convert a PW to a SW with nearly 100% efficiency. Distinct from conventional devices such as prism or grating couplers, the momentum mismatch between PW and SW is compensated by the reflection-phase gradient of the meta-surface, and a nearly perfect PW-SW conversion can happen for any incidence angle larger than a critical value. Experiments in the microwave region, including both far-field and near-field characterizations, are in excellent agreement with full-wave simulations. Our findings may pave the way for many applications, including high-efficiency surface plasmon couplers, anti-reflection surfaces, light absorbers, and so on.
Light can be coupled into propagating electromagnetic surface waves at a metal-dielectric interface known as surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs). This process has traditionally faced challenges in the polarization sensitivity of the coupling efficiency and in controlling the directionality of the SPPs. We designed and demonstrated plasmonic couplers that overcome these limits using polarization-sensitive apertures in a gold film. Our devices enable polarization-controlled tunable directional coupling with polarization-invariant total conversion efficiency and preserve the incident polarization information. Both bidirectional and unidirectional launching of SPPs are demonstrated. The design is further applied to circular structures that create radially convergent and divergent SPPs, illustrating that this concept can be extended to a broad range of applications.
Ultrathin metasurfaces consisting of a monolayer of subwavelength plasmonic resonators are capable of generating local abrupt phase changes and can be used for controlling the wavefront of electromagnetic waves. The phase change occurs for transmitted or reflected wave components whose polarization is orthogonal to that of a linearly polarized (LP) incident wave. As the phase shift relies on the resonant features of the plasmonic structures, it is in general wavelength-dependent. Here, we investigate the interaction of circularly polarized (CP) light at an interface composed of a dipole antenna array to create spatially varying abrupt phase discontinuities. The phase discontinuity is dispersionless, that is, it solely depends on the orientation of dipole antennas, but not their spectral response and the wavelength of incident light. By arranging the antennas in an array with a constant phase gradient along the interface, the phenomenon of broadband anomalous refraction is observed ranging from visible to near-infrared wavelengths. We further design and experimentally demonstrate an ultrathin phase gradient interface to generate a broadband optical vortex beam based on the above principle.
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