| Literature DB >> 27811391 |
Pablo Cencillo-Abad1, Jun-Yu Ou, Eric Plum, João Valente, Nikolay I Zheludev.
Abstract
While metamaterials offer engineered static optical properties, future artificial media with dynamic random-access control over shape and position of meta-molecules will provide arbitrary control of light propagation. The simplest example of such a reconfigurable metamaterial is a nanowire grid metasurface with subwavelength wire spacing. Recently we demonstrated computationally that such a metadevice with individually controlled wire positions could be used as dynamic diffraction grating, beam steering module and tunable focusing element. Here we report on the nanomembrane realization of such a nanowire grid metasurface constructed from individually addressable plasmonic chevron nanowires with a 230 nm × 100 nm cross-section, which consist of gold and silicon nitride. The active structure of the metadevice consists of 15 nanowires each 18 μm long and is fabricated by a combination of electron beam lithography and ion beam milling. It is packaged as a microchip device where the nanowires can be individually actuated by control currents via differential thermal expansion.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27811391 DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/27/48/485206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874