Heterogeneous Freeform Metasurfaces: A Platform for Advanced Broadband Dispersion Engineering
Metasurfaces, with their ability to control electromagnetic waves, hold immense potential in optical device design, especially for applications requiring precise control over dispersion. This work introduces an approach to dispersion engineering using heterogeneous freeform metasurfaces, which overc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Metasurfaces, with their ability to control electromagnetic waves, hold
immense potential in optical device design, especially for applications
requiring precise control over dispersion. This work introduces an approach to
dispersion engineering using heterogeneous freeform metasurfaces, which
overcomes the limitations of conventional metasurfaces that often suffer from
poor transmission, narrow bandwidth, and restricted polarization responses. By
transitioning from single-layer, canonical meta-atoms to bilayer architectures
with non-intuitive geometries, our design decouples intrinsic material
properties (refractive index and group index), enabling independent engineering
of phase and group delays as well as higher-order dispersion properties, while
achieving high-efficiency under arbitrary polarization states. We implement a
two-stage multi-objective optimization process to generate libraries of
meta-atoms, which are then utilized for the rapid design of
dispersion-engineered metasurfaces. Additionally, we present a bilayer
metasurface stacking technique, paving the way for the realization of
high-performance, dispersion-engineered optical devices. Our approach is
validated through the demonstration of metasurfaces exhibiting superior
chromatic aberration correction and broadband performance, with over 81%
averaged efficiency across the 420-nm visible-to-near-infrared bandwidth. Our
synergistic combination of advanced design physics, powerful freeform
optimization methods, and bi-layer nanofabrication techniques represents a
significant breakthrough compared to the state-of-the-art while opening new
possibilities for broadband metasurface applications. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.12028 |