Reconfiguring structured light beams using nonlinear metasurfaces
Yun Xu, Jingbo Sun, Jesse Frantz, Mikhail I. Shalaev, Wiktor Walasik,, Apra Pandey, Jason D. Myers, Robel Y. Bekele, Alexander Tsukernik, Jasbinder, S. Sanghera, Natalia M. Litchinitser

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel, fast, and low-power reconfigurable metasurface using nonlinear chalcogenide glass to convert standard beams into orbital angular momentum beams, advancing optical manipulation and communication technologies.
Contribution
It introduces a new all-dielectric metasurface based on As$_2$S$_3$ glass that enables low-intensity, fast reconfiguration of light beams into OAM states.
Findings
Successfully reshapes Hermite-Gaussian beams into OAM beams at low power
Preserves original beam characteristics at high intensity
Potential applications in optical communication and signal processing
Abstract
Ultra-compact, low-loss, fast, and reconfigurable optical components, enabling manipulation of light by light, could open numerous opportunities for controlling light on the nanoscale. Nanostructured all-dielectric metasurfaces have been shown to enable extensive control of amplitude and phase of light in the linear optical regime. Among other functionalities, they offer unique opportunities for shaping the wave front of light to introduce the orbital angular momentum (OAM) to a beam. Such structured light beams bring a new degree of freedom for applications ranging from spectroscopy and micromanipulation to classical and quantum optical communications. To date, reconfigurability or tuning of the optical properties of all-dielectric metasurfaces have been achieved mechanically, thermally, electrically or optically, using phase-change or nonlinear optical materials. However, a majority…
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