Abstract

Abstract Splitting the spectrum of incident light at nanoscale has been of great scientific and practical interest due to its potential application in various optical sensors. For many years, researchers have been striving to realize the full-color sorting of light at subwavelength scale, while keeping the loss of incident photons to a minimum. In this article, we present semiconductor-based metasurfaces that facilitate the efficient sorting of full-color by inducing anti-Hermitian coupling between multiple nanoantenna arrays. To achieve this, we first explore how the coherent interactions between maximally crafted nanoantennas in the metasurfaces can be effectively controlled by judiciously positioning them in both lateral and vertical directions, which leads to the switched coupling of light at each target position. Based on the analysis, we demonstrate a metasurface-based absorber that features efficient, spectropolarimetric detections over the entire visible spectrum, ranging from 470 to 630 nm. In addition, the metasurface detects relatively narrow spectral linewidth of 60 nm and shows the sensitivity up to 70%, which surpasses the previous works on subwavelength photon sorting or color filter-based detection system. We envision that our approach provides guidelines for realizing the metasurfaces with enhanced functionalities, that is the increase of spectral channels for detection in a given subwavelength-scaled unit cell.

Highlights

  • The ability of metasurfaces composed of nanostructured metals or dielectric materials to control the wavefronts of light has attracted considerable attention due to its potential applications to optical devices including spatial light modulators [1,2,3,4,5], biosensors [6,7], and photodetectors [8,9,10,11,12,13,14], to name a few

  • We present semiconductor-based metasurfaces that facilitate the efficient sorting of full-color by inducing anti-Hermitian coupling between multiple nanoantenna arrays

  • The metasurface detects relatively narrow spectral linewidth of 60 nm and shows the sensitivity up to 70%, which surpasses the previous works on subwavelength photon sorting or color filter-based detection system

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Summary

Introduction

The ability of metasurfaces composed of nanostructured metals or dielectric materials to control the wavefronts of light has attracted considerable attention due to its potential applications to optical devices including spatial light modulators [1,2,3,4,5], biosensors [6,7], and photodetectors [8,9,10,11,12,13,14], to name a few. Significant efforts have been devoted to developing metasurface-based photodetectors, which feature more elaborated fashion of light detection than conventional devices by judiciously controlling the phase of scattered light in absorbing nanostructures [15, 16]. Examples of these include the sensing of specific spectra [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24], polarizations [25, 26], and incident angles [27, 28], as the light passes through ultrathin, nanostructured films. Because the number of splitting channels is determined by the number of meta-atoms integrated in a unit cell, This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0

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