Electrically reconfigurable non-volatile metasurface using low-loss optical phase-change material.

Journal: Nature Nanotechnology
Published:
Abstract

Active metasurfaces promise reconfigurable optics with drastically improved compactness, ruggedness, manufacturability and functionality compared to their traditional bulk counterparts. Optical phase-change materials (PCMs) offer an appealing material solution for active metasurface devices with their large index contrast and non-volatile switching characteristics. Here we report a large-scale, electrically reconfigurable non-volatile metasurface platform based on optical PCMs. The optical PCM alloy used in the devices, Ge2Sb2Se4Te (GSST), uniquely combines giant non-volatile index modulation capability, broadband low optical loss and a large reversible switching volume, enabling notably enhanced light-matter interactions within the active optical PCM medium. Capitalizing on these favourable attributes, we demonstrated quasi-continuously tuneable active metasurfaces with record half-octave spectral tuning range and large optical contrast of over 400%. We further prototyped a polarization-insensitive phase-gradient metasurface to realize dynamic optical beam steering.

Authors
Yifei Zhang, Clayton Fowler, Junhao Liang, Bilal Azhar, Mikhail Shalaginov, Skylar Deckoff Jones, Sensong An, Jeffrey Chou, Christopher Roberts, Vladimir Liberman, Myungkoo Kang, Carlos Ríos, Kathleen Richardson, Clara Rivero Baleine, Tian Gu, Hualiang Zhang, Juejun Hu