| Literature DB >> 29369641 |
Mark Lawrence1, David R Barton1, Jennifer A Dionne1.
Abstract
Metasurfaces enable almost complete control of light through ultrathin, subwavelength surfaces by locally and abruptly altering the scattered phase. To date, however, all metasurfaces obey time-reversal symmetry, meaning that forward and backward traveling waves will trace identical paths when being reflected, refracted, or diffracted. Here, we use full-field calculations to design a passive metasurface for nonreciprocal transmission of both direct and anomalously refracted near-infrared light over nanoscale optical path lengths. The metasurface consists of a 100 nm-thick, periodically patterned Si slab. Owing to the high-quality-factor resonances of the metasurface and the inherent Kerr nonlinearities of Si, this structure acts as an optical diode for free-space optical signals. This structure also exhibits nonreciprocal anomalous refraction with appropriate patterning to form a phase gradient metasurface. Compared to existing schemes for breaking time-reversal symmetry, our platform enables subwavelength nonreciprocity for arbitrary free-space optical inputs and provides a straightforward path to experimental realization. The concept is also generalizable to other metasurface functions, providing a foundation for one-way lensing and holography.Entities:
Keywords: Nonreciprocal optics; all-dielectric metasurface; beam-steering; nonlinear metasurface
Year: 2018 PMID: 29369641 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189