Electrically driven reprogrammable phase-change metasurface reaching 80% efficiency

Abstract

Phase-change materials (PCMs) offer a compelling platform for active metaoptics, owing to their large index contrast and fast yet stable phase transition attributes. Despite recent advances in phase-change metasurfaces, a fully integrable solution that combines pronounced tuning measures, i.e., efficiency, dynamic range, speed, and power consumption, is still elusive. Here, we demonstrate an in situ electrically driven tunable metasurface by harnessing the full potential of a PCM alloy, Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST), to realize non-volatile, reversible, multilevel, fast, and remarkable optical modulation in the near-infrared spectral range. Such a reprogrammable platform presents a record eleven-fold change in the reflectance (absolute reflectance contrast reaching 80%), unprecedented quasi-continuous spectral tuning over 250 nm, and switching speed that can potentially reach a few kHz. Our scalable heterostructure architecture capitalizes on the integration of a robust resistive microheater decoupled from an optically smart metasurface enabling good modal overlap with an ultrathin layer of the largest index contrast PCM to sustain high scattering efficiency even after several reversible phase transitions. We further experimentally demonstrate an electrically reconfigurable phase-change gradient metasurface capable of steering an incident light beam into different diffraction orders. This work represents a critical advance towards the development of fully integrable dynamic metasurfaces and their potential for beamforming applications.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Mar 30, 2022
Source ID
10.1038/s41467-022-29374-6

Entities

People

  • Alex Krasnok
  • Ali Adibi
  • Ali. A. Eftekhar
  • Andrea Alù
  • Christian Teichrib
  • Eric Pop
  • Hossein Taghinejad
  • Matthias Wuttig
  • Mohammad Taghinejad
  • Mostafa El-Sayed
  • Omid Hemmatyar
  • Sajjad Abdollahramezani
  • Sanchit Deshmukh
  • Wenshan Cai

Organizations

  • German Research Foundation
  • National Science Foundation
  • Office of Naval Research
  • United States Department of Defense

Tags

Readers

  • Integrated Circuit Design and Technology.
  • Nanoscale Plasmonic Nanotechnology
  • Optical Physics and Photonics.