| Literature DB >> 35880004 |
Kamalesh Jana1, Emmanuel Okocha1, Søren H Møller1, Yonghao Mi1, Shawn Sederberg1, Paul B Corkum1.
Abstract
Structuring light-matter interaction at a deeply subwavelength scale is fundamental to optical metamaterials and metasurfaces. Conventionally, the operation of a metasurface is determined by the collective electric polarization response of its lithographically defined structures. The inseparability of electric polarization and current density provides the opportunity to construct metasurfaces from current elements instead of nanostructures. Here, we realize metasurfaces using structured light rather than structured materials. Using coherent control, we transfer structure from light to transient currents in a semiconductor, which act as a source for terahertz radiation. A spatial light modulator is used to control the spatial structure of the currents and the resulting terahertz radiation with a resolution of 5.6 ± 0.8 μm , or approximately λ / 54 at a frequency of 1 THz. The independence of the currents from any predefined structures and the maturity of spatial light modulator technology enable this metasurface to be reconfigured with unprecedented flexibility.Entities:
Keywords: coherent control; metasurfaces; optoelectronics; structured light; terahertz radiation; ultrafast optics
Year: 2021 PMID: 35880004 PMCID: PMC8997698 DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2021-0501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanophotonics Impact factor: 7.923
Figure 1:Experimental set-up. (A) The signal beam from an optical parametric amplifier (OPA) is spatially filtered and spectrally broadened using a hollow core fiber (HCF) in ambient air. A dichroic mirror (DM) transmits the spectral wings and reflects the primary spectral content. The reflected light is frequency-doubled using a barium borate (BBO) crystal. A two-color interferometer is used to control the relative phase between these two colors of light and impart structure to the beam using a SLM. The blue spectral tail of the broadened spectrum is frequency-doubled to generate a probe pulse for electro-optic sampling (EOS). A flipper-mirror (FM) is used to direct the bichromatic fields to either an optoelectronic detector for spatio-vectorial current mapping or a GaAs substrate for terahertz generation and EOS. L: Lens; HWP: half-wave plate; WGP: wire grid polarizer; QWP: quarter-wave plate; MS: microscope slide; P: pellicle; WP: Wollaston prism; CF: color filter. (B) Measurement of the OPA spectrum before (black) and after (gray) the HCF. The spectral wings transmitted through the DM are plotted in light pink. (C) The fundamental laser pulse after the two-color interferometer. (D) The laser pulse after the two-color interferometer (blue) and the probe pulse for EOS (yellow). (E) Optical micrograph of the active component of the optoelectronic detector used for spatio-vectorial current mapping. The substrate consists of a 1.2- -thick LT-GaAs film grown on a GaAs substrate. Two large aluminum electrodes separated by a 4 gap are deposited onto the LT-GaAs surface.
Figure 2:EOS of terahertz pulses. (A) Recorded electro-optic signal versus time-delay of the probe pulse. (B) Power spectral density of the waveform plotted in (A). (C) EOS signal at a fixed probe delay as is adjusted.
Figure 3:Wavelength-scale control and measurement of currents. (A) Checkerboard SLM pattern used to control micron-scale currents. The scale bar represents . (B) Spatial mapping of the x-component of the current measured using the optoelectronic detector. The scale bar represents . (C) Plot of the yellow line-out shown in (B). The gray shaded region portrays the region over which the current signal grows from 20 to 80% of its peak-to-peak amplitude.
Figure 4:Control of magnetic field lattices. (A) The SLM pattern used to control magnetic fields. Each conical gradient controls a ring current and magnetic field at the corresponding lattice site. The scale bar represents . (B) Measured spatio-vectorial current arrangement, where a array of ring currents is resolved. The scale bar represents . (C) A calculated snapshot of the magnetic field resulting from the dynamic current arrangement plotted in (B). The snapshot is calculated 100 fs after the laser pulse excitation. The scale bar represents .
Figure 5:Structured currents for metasurfaces. (A) The SLM pattern used to excite a dynamic current resembling a bowtie antenna in the LT-GaAs. The scale bar represents . (B) The current arrangement resulting from the SLM pattern in (A). The scale bar represents . (C) An SLM pattern resembling a bull’s eye structure. The scale bar represents . (D) The current arrangement resulting from the central rings of the SLM pattern in (C). The scale bar represents . The yellow lines indicate the approximate location of phase jumps in the respective SLM patterns.