Nanostructured metasurfaces offer unique capabilities for subwavelength control of optical waves. Based on this potential, a large number of metasurfaces have been proposed recently as alternatives to standard optical elements. In most cases, however, these elements suffer from large chromatic aberrations, thus limiting their usefulness for multiwavelength or broadband applications. Here, in order to alleviate the chromatic aberrations of individual diffractive elements, we introduce dense vertical stacking of independent metasurfaces, where each layer is made from a different material, and is optimally designed for a different spectral band. Using this approach, we demonstrate a triply red, green and blue achromatic metalens in the visible range. We further demonstrate functional beam shaping by a self-aligned integrated element for stimulated emission depletion microscopy and a lens that provides anomalous dispersive focusing. These demonstrations lead the way to the realization of ultra-thin superachromatic optical elements showing multiple functionalities—all in a single nanostructured ultra-thin element.
We present here a method for generating second-harmonic beams with tailored beam profiles using nonlinear metasurfaces based on split ring resonators. By manipulating both the phase and the amplitude of the quadratic nonlinear coefficient locally, at the single inclusion level, the emitted second-harmonic wavefront is perfectly controlled. These concepts are demonstrated experimentally by the far-field generation of second-harmonic Airy and vortex beams from nonlinear binary phase computer-generated holograms and the perfect near-field generation of a Hermite–Gauss beam by precise amplitude and phase construction. We believe that these demonstrations open the door to use nonlinear metasurfaces for a variety of integrated nonlinear beam shaping devices.
We study the optical dynamics in complexes of aluminum nanoantennas coated with molecular J-aggregates and find that they provide an excellent platform for the formation of hybrid exciton-localized surface plasmons. Giant Rabi splitting of 0.4 eV, which corresponds to ∼10 fs energy transfer cycle, is observed in spectral transmittance. We show that the nanoantennas can be used to manipulate the polarization of hybrid states and to confine their mode volumes. In addition, we observe enhancement of the photoluminescence due to enhanced absorption and increase in the local density of states at the exciton-localized surface plasmon energies. With recent emerging technological applications based on strongly coupled light-matter states, this study opens new possibilities to explore and utilize the unique properties of hybrid states over all of the visible region down to ultraviolet frequencies in nanoscale, technologically compatible, integrated platforms based on aluminum.
We study experimentally second-harmonic generation from arrays of split-ring resonators at oblique incidence and find conditions of more than 30-fold enhancement of the emitted second harmonic with respect to normal incidence. We show that these conditions agree well with a nonlinear Rayleigh-Wood anomaly relation and the existence of a surface lattice resonance at the second harmonic. The existence of a nonlinear surface lattice resonance is theoretically confirmed by extending the coupled dipole approximation to the nonlinear case. We further show that the localized surface plasmon modes that collectively contribute to the surface lattice resonance are inherently dark modes that become highly bright due to the collective interaction.
We demonstrate experimentally and by simulations a method for using thin nanostructured plasmonic metasurfaces to design diffractive Fresnel zone plate lenses that focus pairs of wavelengths to a single focal point. The metasurfaces are made of tightly packed cross and rod shaped optical nanoantennas with strong polarization and wavelength selectivity. This selectivity allows multiplexing two different lenses with low spectral crosstalk on the same substrate and to address any superposition of the two colors at the focus of the lenses by controlling the polarization of light. This concept can open the door to use ultrathin diffractive lenses in fluorescence microscopy and in stimulated emission depletion microscopy.
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