2017
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13793
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Luminescent hyperbolic metasurfaces

Abstract: When engineered on scales much smaller than the operating wavelength, metal-semiconductor nanostructures exhibit properties unobtainable in nature. Namely, a uniaxial optical metamaterial described by a hyperbolic dispersion relation can simultaneously behave as a reflective metal and an absorptive or emissive semiconductor for electromagnetic waves with orthogonal linear polarization states. Using an unconventional multilayer architecture, we demonstrate luminescent hyperbolic metasurfaces, wherein distribute… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(68 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(78 reference statements)
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“…We have reviewed a few of the representative demonstrations of metasurface‐based devices such as wave plates, polarimetries, metalenses, metaholograms, and optical vortex converters, and these examples are listed in Table 3 - 6 . There are still many other aspects or applications not included here, such as nonlinear metasurfaces, hyperbolic metasurfaces, thin‐film metasurfaces, parity–time symmetry metasurfaces, etc. Thanks to the advances in nanofabrication technologies, these low‐cost, large‐area, and mass‐productive techniques have sped up the development of static metadevices and are gradually becoming mature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have reviewed a few of the representative demonstrations of metasurface‐based devices such as wave plates, polarimetries, metalenses, metaholograms, and optical vortex converters, and these examples are listed in Table 3 - 6 . There are still many other aspects or applications not included here, such as nonlinear metasurfaces, hyperbolic metasurfaces, thin‐film metasurfaces, parity–time symmetry metasurfaces, etc. Thanks to the advances in nanofabrication technologies, these low‐cost, large‐area, and mass‐productive techniques have sped up the development of static metadevices and are gradually becoming mature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For t = 70 nm, DOLT = 0.993 and T(TM) = 0.991, while for t = 210 nm, DOLT>0.999999 and T(TM) = 0.973 If the metal is deposited via sputtering, then selecting a thickness of 70 nm ensures a practically realizable aspect ratio of less than 3:1, assuming a 100 nm period with a ~75 nm Ag block and a ~25 nm air trench [8]. However, as shown in Section 3.3, a thicker HMS is desirable to mitigate errors in detection.…”
Section: Optimization Of Degree-of-linear-polarization and Efficiencymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of losses, and possibly gain [8], in the constituent materials, the effective permittivity elements are generally complex, with the single and double primes denoting real and imaginary parts, respectively. Given the dispersion of the constituent metallic and dielectric materials, maximizing the LD of the HMS therefore consists of identifying the optimal values of the HMS parameters, ρ and the thickness, t. For a Type II HMS [8], in which ε' || >0 and ε' ┴ <0, as occurs for a Ag/air system in the visible and near-infrared, the effective refractive indices are given by…”
Section: Design Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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