Abstract

All-dielectric optical antenna with multiple Mie modes and lower inherent ohmic loss can achieve high efficiency of light manipulation. However, the silicon-based optical antenna is not reconfigurable for specific scenarios. The refractive index of optical phase-change materials can be reconfigured under stimulus, and this singular behavior makes it a good candidate for making reconfigurable passive optical devices. Here, the optical radiation characteristics of the V-shaped phase-change antenna are investigated theoretically. The results show that with increasing crystallinity, the maximum radiation direction of the V-shaped phase-change antenna can be continuously deflected by 90°. The exact multipole decomposition analysis reveals that the modulus and interference phase difference of the main multipole moments change with the crystallinity, resulting in a continuous deflection of the maximum radiation direction. Thus, the power ratio in the two vertical radiation directions can be monotonically reversed from −12 to 7 dB between 20% and 80% crystallinity. The V-shaped phase-change antenna exhibits the potential to act as the basic structural unit to construct a reconfigurable passive spatial angular power splitter or wavelength multiplexer. The mechanism analysis of radiation directivity involving the modulus and interference phase difference of the multipole moments will provide a reference for the design and optimization of the phase-change antenna.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call