Abstract

The development of optical systems is heading to multi-branch circuit design and miniaturization. A beam splitter is a common device for dividing an incident beam into two separate beams. Conventional beam splitters are constructed using coated prisms or glass plate. Their bulky size, right-angled output direction, and fixed splitting ratio greatly limit the design of optical arrangement and also hinder the system integration. Here, an all-dielectric metasurface composed of symmetric nano-rings as a beam splitter are designed by Finite-Difference Time-Domain method. By changing the inner and outer radiuses of the nano-rings, the wavefront phase of the emergence beam can be adjusted to form a phase gradient, and the incident beam of arbitrary polarization is divided into two beams according to the designed transmittance and angle. The initial phase of the emergence beam can be changed by adjusting the refractive index of the substrate or adding the silicon film to the substrate, and the splitting ratio can be adjusted from 0.5:1 to 1:1. The simulation demonstrates that the metasurface-based beam splitter is independent of polarization and the power efficiency is over 92% with a compact area of 33.6 μm × 33.6 μm. This compact metasurface-based beam splitter has promising potential for enabling new types of compact optical systems and advancing metasurface-based functional integrated photonic applications.

Highlights

  • The pursuit of photonic integration systems drives the present study of integrated photonics

  • We proposed and designed an all-dielectric metasurface-based and polarization-independent beam splitter (BS) in the near-infrared region, which has advantages of small size, higher power efficiency, and a regulated splitting ratio

  • The proposed beam splitter exhibits the desirable abilities of separating an incident light of any polarization toward two pre-designed directions

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Summary

Introduction

The pursuit of photonic integration systems drives the present study of integrated photonics. A beam splitter (BS) is a critical component for distributing and combining beam paths in many optical systems. The most common cube BS are constructed using two typically right angle prisms to split incident beam into two equal beams vertically [1]. It can be used in reverse to combine two different beams into a single one. Silicon beam splitters are used for MZM, splitting, and combining in waveguide systems [2,3,4]. Some flat-type BSs like plate BS [5], grating BS [6], and dichroic BS [7] have been previously demonstrated

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