Chang-Won Lee1, Hee Jin Choi2, Heejeong Jeong3. 1. Institute of Advanced Optics and Photonics, Department of Applied Optics, Hanbat National University, Daejeon, 34158, Korea. cwlee42@hanbat.ac.kr. 2. Institute of Advanced Optics and Photonics, Department of Applied Optics, Hanbat National University, Daejeon, 34158, Korea. 3. Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Malaya, 50603, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. jhj413@gmail.com.
Abstract
Demand on optical or photonic applications in the visible or short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) spectra, such as vision, virtual or augmented displays, imaging, spectroscopy, remote sensing (LIDAR), chemical reaction sensing, microscopy, and photonic integrated circuits, has envisaged new type of subwavelength-featured materials and devices for controlling electromagnetic waves. The study on metasurfaces, of which the thickness is either comparable to or smaller than the wavelength of the considered incoming electromagnetic wave, has been grown rapidly to embrace the needs of developing sub 100-micron active photonic pixelated devices and their arrayed form. Meta-atoms in metasurfaces are now actively controlled under external stimuli to lead to a large phase shift upon the incident light, which has provided a huge potential for arrayed two-dimensional active optics. This short review summarizes actively tunable or reconfigurable metasurfaces for the visible or SWIR spectra, to account for the physical operating principles and the current issues to overcome.
Demand on optical or photonic applications in the visible or short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) spectra, such as vision, virtual or augmented displays, imaging, spectroscopy, remote sensing (LIDAR), chemical reaction sensing, microscopy, and photonic integrated circuits, has envisaged new type of subwavelength-featured materials and devices for controlling electromagnetic waves. The study on metasurfaces, of which the thickness is either comparable to or smaller than the wavelength of the considered incoming electromagnetic wave, has been grown rapidly to embrace the needs of developing sub 100-micron active photonic pixelated devices and their arrayed form. Meta-atoms in metasurfaces are now actively controlled under external stimuli to lead to a large phase shift upon the incident light, which has provided a huge potential for arrayed two-dimensional active optics. This short review summarizes actively tunable or reconfigurable metasurfaces for the visible or SWIR spectra, to account for the physical operating principles and the current issues to overcome.
Electromagnetic or photonic metamaterials are artificial materials made of natural metals or dielectrics so as to be specially engineered to provide new and exotic interactions between incident waves and matter. Metamaterials show phenomena that are not observed in natural or conventional materials, such as the negative refractive index [1-3], the perfect absorption [4], subwavelength focusing [5] and hyperbolically-engineered dispersion [6, 7]. Metasurface, which is the two-dimensional cousin of the metamaterial, has the thickness smaller than the wavelength of the incident light that allows control of the optical wavefront over subwavelength thicknesses [8]. Therefore, the interaction between the metasurface and the light has to be enough in order to alter the characteristics of the incident light. The characteristics of a metamaterial or a metasurface are primarily determined by its inner structure called “meta-atom” and the interaction between them. Even though meta-atom is originally defined as the unit cell in a uniformly periodic structure, many non-periodic or non-uniformly engineered meta-atoms are now available for passive metasurface applications such as lenses [9-15], axicons [16, 17], polarization converters [18, 19], and holograms [20-22].Recent advancement in metasurfaces allows active control of light beyond manipulating the characteristics of the light under stationary platforms. Manufacturing metasurfaces becomes more viable compared to its three-dimensional cousin, because of its planar geometry and the well-established lithographic fabrication processes. The active tuning of light through a three-dimensional tunable metamaterial can be obtained by various external stimuli by electrical [23-26], mechanical [27-30], optical [31-33], thermal, or magnetic means. For mid-infrared or terahertz radiation spectra, split-ring-based, dielectric resonator-based, phase-change-materials-based, graphene-based, or liquid–crystal-based metamaterials are available, as reviewed in the previous literature [34-38]. Each control requires materials with significant optical characteristics to change accordingly.Microscopic origin responsible for metasurface properties can be explained in terms of phase shift of incident light. The phase shift alters reflection, transmission, phase, polarization, and frequency states of the incident light. In order to gain full control of transmitted or reflected electromagnetic waves from a metasurface, it is necessary to have a full phase shift up to 2π upon incident waves. For passive metasurface with thickness t, typical phase shift for normal incidence after the transmission is approximated by where is the wavelength of the incident wave and n is the effective refractive index of the metasurface. The phase shift of the planar-shaped metasurfaces can be limited if the used natural materials’s refractive index is not high enough. It is noteworthy that the phase distribution of modern metasurfaces is independently controlled my meta-atoms and can be either continuous and discontinuous [39]. Even though there are a number of materials showing such a controlled optical phase shifts mid-infrared or longer wavelengths, there have been quite challenging to obtain thin materials or devices for tunable metasurface in visible and SWIR regions. The difficulty comes from that natural materials, including semiconductors and conducting oxides, tend to show decreasing behavior of dielectric permittivities approaching unity, almost inversely proportional to the square of the radiation frequency (or proportional to the square of the wavelengths in a vacuum) [40]. If the dielectric permittivity of the parallel component to the incident light is close to unity, no interesting metasurface characteristics emerge.Tunable metasurfaces for visible and SWIR spectra can be categorized, based on its controlling methods, as (1) electrically-tunable, (2) electromechanically-tunable, (3) nonlinear-optically-tunable, and (4) thermally-tunable ones, similar to the categories of three-dimensional metamaterials. There are other tuning mechanisms such as magneto-optical tuning methods and however, the workable wavelengths from other mechanisms are not currently available in the visible or SWIR light.Electrical control on metasurface accompanies external bias potential across the entire metasurface or on part of the metamaterials nearby. The external bias reaches individual meta-atoms or a local inner structure [41]. The biasing geometries can be similar to the cases of two-terminal diodes or three-terminal field-effect transistors. Electromechanically-tunable metamaterials use electromechanical control for compressing, stretching, or pressuring to change the periodicities of meta-atoms fabricated on a flexible substrate. Likewise, nonlinear-optically-tunable metamaterials use optical pumping for dynamic control of optical properties such as optically induced transition or nonlinearity. Thermally tunable metasurfaces use phase-change material, which shows dielectric permittivity changes due to its crystalline or electronic phase change according to the temperature.So far, the most successfully engineered material in the visible or SWIR light manipulation is a liquid crystal being widely used in visual displays. However, the thickness of the liquid crystal layer has to exceed ~ 100 μm in order to gain the full 2π phase shift. The maximum modulation speed and anchoring problem are inherently limited by molecular orientation liquid crystal molecules. However, recent advancements in semiconductors, transparent conducting oxides, phase-change materials, and two-dimensional materials begin to invoke potentials to provide fast modulation tunability bandwidth exceeding 10 GHz in visible and SWIR spectra on the very thin material platform less than 10 μm [42-44]. Therefore, the development of tunable metamaterials and metasurfaces in the visible and SWIR spectra provides a great impact on optical and photonic applications with ultra-small form factors for the upcoming 4th industrial revolution. In this review, physical principles and tuning mechanisms of individual meta-atom in tunable metasurfaces are discussed with emphasis on the distinctive characteristics of the applied materials and potential applications.
Electrically-tunable metasurfaces
Electrically-tunable metamaterials and metasurfaces for visible or SWIR spectra use local refractive index change according to charge carrier redistribution upon external perturbation. Here charge carriers can be electrons, holes, or ions. Biasing individual meta-atom results in temporally changing electromagnetic phase distribution determined by dynamically-controlled carrier concentration changes. Electric field-effect based light modulation has distinct advantages over liquid crystal-based modulation because it provides (1) fast response (typically > 1 MHz bandwidth of modulation), (2) relatively low power consumption with devices sizes smaller than submicron sizes, (3) CMOS fabrication compatibility, and (4) capability of high-density integration. Estimating carrier concentration of material is important because the redistributed carrier determines the possible phase shift range upon incident light wavelength, the ratio of polarization, and scattering direction [45].There have been four proposed physical mechanisms based on tunable dispersion relations to design the electronically-tunable metasurfaces. (1) First, dispersion with epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) conditions for semiconducting or oxide materials has long been investigated. The ENZ condition is fulfilled when the real part of the dielectric permittivity approaches zero at a certain wavelength at the interface with adjacent materials. Therefore, the electric field virtually goes to infinity to satisfy the boundary conditions of Maxwell’s equations [46, 47]. The most intensively studied ENZ material in the visible or SWIR spectra is a transparent conducting oxide, such as indium tin oxide (ITO) and aluminum-zinc oxide (AZO). (2) The second candidate for enhancing light-matter interaction is the hyperbolic dispersion condition [6, 48]. Strong anisotropic dispersion in stacked multilayers or pillars of metallic and dielectric materials leads to field enhancement along a direction to the hyperbolic wave vector becoming imaginary. (3) Another proposed mechanism is based on altering Mie resonance condition [24, 49], however, this idea has yet been realized in the visible or SWIR spectra. (4) The most recently physical mechanism is based on dynamic control of quantum-confined confined Stark effect [50].The ENZ dispersion condition for tunable metasurfaces can be understood qualitatively as in the following manner. The meta-atom with two or more electrodes can be regarded as a capacitor. Therefore, the carrier concentration under ENZ condition voltage can be approximately estimated by matching the driving voltage and the dielectric permittivity. The driving voltage required to reach ENZ is defined as where is the free carrier concentration in the considered material at the ENZ condition and is the thickness of the charge accumulation layer. Because the capacitance is given by where is the permittivity of vacuum, is the dielectric constant of the material, and is the thickness of the material, the electric field at ENZ condition is given by The wavelength and the angle of incidence at ENZ condition can be found by searching poles in the Fresnel formula for transmittance or reflectance. Using the Drude model, it is possible to estimate carrier concentration using this form of the electric field as an external stimulus.One of the noticeable metasurface structures based on electric field-effect based SWIR light modulation has been demonstrated by Huang et al. [51]. The electrically tunable metasurface consists of an electrically bus-connected one-dimensional gold nanoantenna array patterned on thin Al2O3 and ITO layers, deposited on a gold mirror as shown in Fig. 1a. Al2O3 layer, grown by atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) method, provides good thermal stability and a high breakdown field larger than 10 MV/cm [54]. Identical antenna arrays are connected either to right or left external gold connections and electrodes to permit phase and amplitude modulation by electrical gating. Oxide-based field-effect modulation consists of metal–transparent conducting oxide–metal configuration where transparent conducting oxide acts as a semiconductor. All the optical antennae have identical geometries, but applying different voltages to neighboring antennae controls the phase shift imposed by the different antennae. Each antenna was designed with a shape to impose a phase shift on the incident plane wave, which is pre-defined by the lithographic patterning process.
Tunable metamaterials can be made by dynamic structural changes by the external stimuli altering the size, the shape of, and distance between meta-atoms. These mechanical stimuli can be attained by a controllable actuation of the sub-wavelength structure. However, the realization of these structures for visible or SWIR spectra is expensive due to complex submicron fabrication and mechanical endurance has to be ensured to gain popularity like a pixelated micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) mirror arrays.In a practical way, manufacturing arrays of resonators on stretchable elastomeric substrates offer a dynamic tuning of the optical metamaterials. The flexible elastomeric substrate can achieve large tuning ranges and relative ease of fabrication. Because stretching or shrinking elastomeric substrates has restoration and cycling problem, the geometric design has been carefully chosen to keep linear response and restoration under repetitive stimuli.Ou et al. demonstrated electromechanically-driven metasurface working in SWIR spectra, as shown in Fig. 3a [28]. The metasurface is fabricated by focused ion beam milling on a 50-nm-thick silicon nitride membrane. When a bias ~ 3 V is applied, the strings in the metasurface are exposed to electrostatic force, which leads to string fields in the gaps between them. As a result, the transmittance could be modulated by 5% in SWIR. The modulation depth was changing as a function of the modulation frequency.
Reconfigurable metasurfaces based on optical nonlinearity
The properties of light in metasurfaces can be controlled dynamically by means of optical pumping. An optical tuning can be achieved by inserting an active layer that responds to the pumping light in a metallic or dielectric nanocavity.Zhu et al. realized plasmon-induced nonlinear tunable transparency using gold meta-atom on top of a thin polycrystalline ITO layer, as shown in Fig.4a [69]. The Kerr nonlinear index of refraction is given by where and are linear anthe d nonlinear refractive index of ITO, is the real part of the third-order nonlinear susceptibility of the ITO, is the permittivity of the vacuum, and is the light velocity in the vacuum. The plasmonic resonances of the meta-atom lead to superradiance and subradiance depending on the pump laser intensity. This effect leads to an optical transparency window shift to the short-wavelength direction in SWIR.
Thermally tunable metasurfaces based on phase change materials
Phase-change materials show near-unity refractive index change as the structural or electronic phase changes across a critical temperature. Since the application of digital versatile disc (DVD), germanium-antimony-tellurium (GST) with a crystallization temperature Tc of ~ 433 K (160 °C) and a melting temperature of ~ 873 K (600 °C) has long been used as a common phase change material. For the SWIR spectra application, vanadium dioxide (VO2) shows a hysteretic structural phase transition from the monoclinic phase to the tetragonal phase when the temperature rises above from 340 K (67 °C). Because the temperature could be risen by electrical current pulse injection, these two materials have been intensively investigated for tunable metasurface applications.Gholipour et al. demonstrated all-optical bidirectional metasurface based on the GST as shown in Fig. 5a [73]. A 15 nm-thick GST layer is sandwiched between SiO2 and ZnS/SiO2 layers. Plasmonic thin trenches made of 50-nm-thick Au layer support plasmonic resonance and enhanced photoabsorption for a temperature change of GST. As the phase of the GST layer changes from the crystalline phase to the amorphous phase, the transmission at SWIR spectra is enhanced from 20% to 40%. The temperature control of the GST layer is provided by a temporally-modulated light to morph phases between amorphous one and crystalline one.
We have briefly summarized recent advances in tunable metasurfaces in the visible and SWIR, focusing particularly on available tuning mechanisms. Despite all the advancements made in the past few years, we have witnessed there are quite a number of challenges to overcome. One of the challenges in the material point of view is that the natural materials in the visible do not have enough refractive indices. This limits the minimum thickness of the materials to allow enough phase shifts originated from the electric field, electrical power to change phase or thermal or optical power. From fundamental point-of-view, tunable metasurfaces also have similar challenges as passive metasurfaces such as polarization-control, chromatic aberration, large-deflection angle, high efficiency, and the number of available degree of freedoms to solve these issues in single surface or a specific volume [8].These problems are also related to the problems in unresolved practical issues to allow high-volume, low-cost metasurface devices. Each mechanism has clear advantages and disadvantages to meet the needs of highly pixelated tunable optical and photonic devices in visible and SWIR spectra. For thorough control of the tunable meta-atoms, individual excess to meta-atom and the required integrated biasing circuit, and simultaneous and locked operation of multiple meta-atoms are required. Also, the endurance of meta-atoms under repetitive biasing or optical stimuli and sufficient modulation depth and bandwidths to meet the full 2π phase shift in the target spectra should be overcome.Despite the difficulties in realizing practical, real-life tunable metasurface devices, we witness continuous efforts to overcome the challenges. We recently noticed different class of tuning mechanism, based on of time-domain-control of metasurfaces, different from nonlinear-optical tunable metasurfaces [77, 78]. Nonconventional metasurfaces, based on non-Hermitian coupling, topological, non-local, and quantum–mechanical interactions are also actively studied [79]. Not to mention the importance of the new class of tuning mechanisms, we expect new tuning mechanisms could revolutionize optics and photonics beyond conventional diffractive optics and electromagnetics in the tunable metamaterials for the visible or SWIR spectra. Even though developing highly integrated tunable optoelectronic or photonic devices and systems with small form factor is a formidable task, we believe the advancement of technology will be able to bring us a new powerful tool for the development of full-random-accessible meta-atoms in a metasurface platform and to find new entrepreneur applications with tunable optical metamaterials and metasurfaces.
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