A Metalens with a Near-Unity Numerical Aperture

The numerical aperture (NA) of a lens determines its ability to focus light and its resolving capability. Having a large NA is a very desirable quality for applications requiring small light–matter interaction volumes or large angular collections. Traditionally, a large NA lens based on light refrac...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano letters 2018-03, Vol.18 (3), p.2124-2132
Hauptverfasser: Paniagua-Domínguez, Ramón, Yu, Ye Feng, Khaidarov, Egor, Choi, Sumin, Leong, Victor, Bakker, Reuben M, Liang, Xinan, Fu, Yuan Hsing, Valuckas, Vytautas, Krivitsky, Leonid A, Kuznetsov, Arseniy I
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The numerical aperture (NA) of a lens determines its ability to focus light and its resolving capability. Having a large NA is a very desirable quality for applications requiring small light–matter interaction volumes or large angular collections. Traditionally, a large NA lens based on light refraction requires precision bulk optics that ends up being expensive and is thus also a specialty item. In contrast, metasurfaces allow the lens designer to circumvent those issues producing high-NA lenses in an ultraflat fashion. However, so far, these have been limited to numerical apertures on the same order of magnitude as traditional optical components, with experimentally reported NA values of 0.99) and subwavelength thickness (∼λ/3), operating with unpolarized light at 715 nm. To demonstrate its imaging capability, the designed lens is applied in a confocal configuration to map color centers in subdiffractive diamond nanocrystals. This work, based on diffractive elements that can efficiently bend light at angles as large as 82°, represents a step beyond traditional optical elements and existing flat optics, circumventing the efficiency drop associated with the standard, phase mapping approach.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b00368