The promise of active nanophotonics technology relies on the confinement and control of light at the nanoscale. Confinement via plasmonics, dielectric resonators, and waveguides can be complemented with materials whose optical properties can be controlled using nonlinear effects. Transparent conducting oxides (TCOs) exhibit strong optical nonlinearities in their near zero permittivity spectral region, on the femtosecond
The promise of dynamic nanophotonic technologies relies on the confinement and spatiotemporal control of light at the nanoscale. Confinement via plasmonics, dielectric resonators, and waveguides can be complemented with materials whose optical properties can be controlled using nonlinear effects. Transparent conducting oxides (TCOs) exhibit strong optical nonlinearities in their near‐zero permittivity spectral region, on the femtosecond timescale. Harnessing full spatiotemporal control over the nonlinear response requires a deeper understanding of the process. To achieve this, a self‐consistent multiphysics time‐domain model for the nonlinear optical response of TCOs is developed and implemented into a 3D finite‐difference time‐domain code. Simulations are compared and tuned against recently published experimental results for intense laser irradiation of thin indium tin oxide (ITO) films, achieving good quantitative agreement; the time‐domain dynamics of the nonlinear response and the phenomenon of time‐refraction are also explored. Finally, by simulating intense laser irradiation of a plasmonic particle on an ITO film, the applicability of the approach to time‐varying metasurfaces is demonstrated. As expected, significant enhancement of the nonlinear response of an ITO‐based metasurface over bare ITO thin films is found. This work thus enables quantitative nanophotonics design with conductive oxides in their epsilon‐near‐zero region.
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