Journal Article10.1515/nanoph-2023-0824
Thermally tunable binary-phase VO2 metasurfaces for switchable holography and digital encryption
Yuan Liao,Yulong Fan,Dangyuan Lei +2 more
12
TL;DR: Thermally tunable VO2 metasurfaces enable switchable holography and digital encryption. High-quality holographic images are generated by manipulating the insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO2 nanofins.
read more
Abstract: Abstract Metasurface holography has aroused immense interest in producing holographic images with high quality, higher-order diffraction-free, and large viewing angles by using a planar artificial sheet consisting of subwavelength nanostructures. Despite remarkable progress, dynamically tunable metasurface holography in the visible band has rarely been reported due to limited available tuning methods. In this work, we propose and numerically demonstrate a thermally tunable vanadium dioxide (VO2) nanofin based binary-phase metasurface, which generates holographic information in the visible varying with temperature. The insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO2 nanofins allows two independent binary-phase holograms generated by machine learning to be encoded in the respective phases of VO2 and switched under thermal regulation. By elaborately designing the dimensions and compensated phase of VO2 nanofins, high-quality images are reconstructed at corresponding temperatures under appropriate chiral illumination. In contrast, much poorer images are produced under inappropriate chiral illumination. We further demonstrate the advantage of applying the VO2 phase-compensated metasurface in high-security digital encryption, where two desired character combinations are read out with appropriate excitations and temperatures, whereas one identical fraudulent message is received with inappropriate excitations. Our design approach offers a new and efficient method to realize tunable metasurfaces, which is promisingly adopted in dynamic display, information encryption, optical anti-counterfeiting, etc.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Structured-Light 3D Imaging Based on Vector Iterative Fourier Transform Algorithm
Runzhe Zhang,Shuai Qiao,Yangyang Luo,Yinghui Guo,Xiaoyin Li,Qi Zhang,Yu-Chen Fan,Zeyu Zhao,Xiangang Luo +8 more
TL;DR: Structured-light 3D imaging based on vector iterative Fourier transform algorithm utilizes quasi-continuous-phase metasurfaces to impart optical parameters to light at sub-wavelength scales and achieve high-accuracy 3D imaging with low computational cost and fast imaging speed.
High-quality polycrystalline vanadium dioxide thin films deposited via pulsed laser deposition with high uniformity and consistency
Zhixiang Huang,Sai Rahul Sitaram,Eric Herrmann,S. M. Jahadun-Nobi,Ke Ma,Xi Wang,Zhixiang Huang,Sai Rahul Sitaram,Eric Herrmann,S. M. Jahadun-Nobi,Ke Ma,Xi Wang +11 more
TL;DR: Researchers developed a pulsed laser deposition method to deposit high-quality, uniform polycrystalline vanadium dioxide thin films with precise stoichiometric control, exhibiting a significant resistance change during phase transition and reliable reproducibility.
Recent Advances in Tunable/Reconfigurable Terahertz Metadevices Based on Phase‐Change Materials
He Shao
TL;DR: Recent advances in tunable/reconfigurable THz metadevices using phase-change materials offer promising solutions for adaptive control and dynamic modulation, enhancing THz communication and sensing applications with improved frequency range, modulation depth, and switching speed.
Reconfigurable EIT Metasurface with Low Excited Conductivity of VO2
Ruijie Li,Qiang Feng,Gaomou Lei,Qifan Li,Haixia Liu,Peng Xu,Jiaqi Han,Yan Shi,Long Li +8 more
TL;DR: Researchers propose a metal-doped VO2 switch to balance modulation performance and rate requirements in terahertz communication systems, enabling a reconfigurable EIT metasurface with low excited conductivity of VO2 for amplitude modulation and coding.
Phototunable spin-decoupled terahertz metasurface for high-security multichannel holographic encryption
Lijian Zhang,Xu-Yang Chen,Zepeng Zhao,Peng Song,Xuejiao Hu,Zexin Yu +5 more
References
Light Propagation with Phase Discontinuities: Generalized Laws of Reflection and Refraction
Nanfang Yu,Patrice Genevet,Patrice Genevet,Mikhail A. Kats,Francesco Aieta,Francesco Aieta,Jean-Philippe Tetienne,Jean-Philippe Tetienne,Federico Capasso,Zeno Gaburro,Zeno Gaburro +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, a two-dimensional array of optical resonators with spatially varying phase response and subwavelength separation can imprint phase discontinuities on propagating light as it traverses the interface between two media.
8.8K
Light Propagation with Phase Discontinuities: Generalized Laws of Reflection and Refraction
Abstract: Light propagation can be controlled with plasmonic interfaces that introduce abrupt phase shifts along the optical path. Conventional optical components rely on gradual phase shifts accumulated during light propagation to shape light beams. New degrees of freedom are attained by introducing abrupt phase changes over the scale of the wavelength. A two-dimensional array of optical resonators with spatially varying phase response and subwavelength separation can imprint such phase discontinuities on propagating light as it traverses the interface between two media. Anomalous reflection and refraction phenomena are observed in this regime in optically thin arrays of metallic antennas on silicon with a linear phase variation along the interface, which are in excellent agreement with generalized laws derived from Fermat’s principle. Phase discontinuities provide great flexibility in the design of light beams, as illustrated by the generation of optical vortices through use of planar designer metallic interfaces.
5.1K
Metalenses at visible wavelengths: Diffraction-limited focusing and subwavelength resolution imaging.
Mohammadreza Khorasaninejad,Wei Ting Chen,Robert C. Devlin,Jaewon Oh,Alexander Y. Zhu,Federico Capasso +5 more
TL;DR: The results firmly establish that metalenses can have widespread applications in laser-based microscopy, imaging, and spectroscopy, with image qualities comparable to a state-of-the-art commercial objective.
3.1K
Dielectric gradient metasurface optical elements.
TL;DR: The experimental realization and operation of dielectric gradient metasurface optical elements capable of also achieving high efficiencies in transmission mode in the visible spectrum are described.
2.4K
Metasurface holograms for visible light
TL;DR: Ni et al. as discussed by the authors presented ultra-thin plasmonic holograms that control amplitude and phase in the visible region and are just 30 nm thick, which is comparable to the light wavelength used.