Engineering Shadows to Fabricate Optical Metasurfaces
Optical metasurfacespatterned arrays of plasmonic nanoantennas that enable the precise manipulation of light–matter interactionsare emerging as critical components in many nanophotonic materials, including planar metamaterials, chemical and biological sensors, and photovoltaics. The development of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | ACS nano 2014-11, Vol.8 (11), p.11061-11070 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Optical metasurfacespatterned arrays of plasmonic nanoantennas that enable the precise manipulation of light–matter interactionsare emerging as critical components in many nanophotonic materials, including planar metamaterials, chemical and biological sensors, and photovoltaics. The development of these materials has been slowed by the difficulty of efficiently fabricating patterns with the required combinations of intricate nanoscale structure, high areal density, and/or heterogeneous composition. One convenient strategy that enables parallel fabrication of periodic nanopatterns uses self-assembled colloidal monolayers as shadow masks; this method has, however, not been extended beyond a small set of simple patterns and, thus, has remained incompatible with the broad design requirements of metasurfaces. This paper demonstrates a techniqueshadow-sphere lithography (SSL)that uses sequential deposition from multiple angles through plasma-etched microspheres to expand the variety and complexity of structures accessible by colloidal masks. SSL harnesses the entire, relatively unexplored, space of shadow-derived shapes andwith custom software to guide multiangled depositioncontains sufficient degrees of freedom to (i) design and fabricate a wide variety of metasurfaces that incorporate complex structures with small feature sizes and multiple materials and (ii) generate, in parallel, thousands of variations of structures for high-throughput screening of new patterns that may yield unexpected optical spectra. This generalized approach to engineering shadows of spheres provides a new strategy for efficient prototyping and discovery of periodic metasurfaces. |
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ISSN: | 1936-0851 1936-086X |
DOI: | 10.1021/nn504214b |