| Literature DB >> 29946120 |
Zhen-Hua Fang1, Huan Chen1, Di An1, Chun-Rong Luo1, Xiao-Peng Zhao2.
Abstract
Cross-polarization conversion plays an important role in visible light manipulation. Metasurface with asymmetric structure can be used to achieve polarization conversion of linearly polarized light. Based on this, we design a quasi-periodic dendritic metasurface model composed of asymmetric dendritic cells. The simulation indicates that the asymmetric dendritic structure can vertically rotate the polarization direction of the linear polarization wave in visible light. Silver dendritic cell-cluster metasurface samples were prepared by the bottom-up electrochemical deposition. It experimentally proved that they could realize the cross - polarization conversion in visible light. Cross-polarized propagating light is deflected into anomalous refraction channels. Dendritic cell-cluster metasurface with asymmetric quasi-periodic structure conveys significance in cross-polarization conversion research and features extensive practical application prospect and development potential.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29946120 PMCID: PMC6018708 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-28030-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Dendritic structure and numerical simulation. (a) Schematic of a linearly polarized plane wave perpendicularly passing through the dendritic cell-cluster metasurface. (b) Schematic of three types of dendritic cells and their transmitted electric field distribution. (c) Schematic of a dendritic cell-cluster comprising three types of dendritic cells. Transmitted electric field of dendritic cell-cluster metasurface; (d) Transmitted spectrum of dendritic cell-cluster metasurface.
Figure 2Dendritic metasurface sample characterization analysis. (a) SEM photograph of partial silver dendritic cell-cluster metasurface. The scale label is 500 nm. (b) The transmission spectrum of four dendritic cell-cluster metasurface samples.
Figure 3Experimental setup used to measure transmitted light through the metasurface.
Figure 4Experimental results of co- and cross-polarization transmission of (a) s1 at 550 nm, (b) s2 at 570 nm, (c) s3 at 590 nm, and (d) s4 at 620 nm (Visualization 1). (e) The conversion efficiency of s4 as a function of wavelength.