The Potential of Combining Thermal Scanning Probes and Phase-Change Materials for Tunable Metasurfaces
Ann-Katrin U. Michel, Sebastian Meyer, Nicolas Essing, Nolan, Lassaline, Carin R. Lightner, Samuel Bisig, David J. Norris, and Dmitry N., Chigrin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel thermal scanning-probe method to locally switch phase-change materials in metasurfaces, enabling sub-diffraction feature sizes and broadband tunability for applications like sensing and filtering.
Contribution
It proposes a new thermal scanning-probe technique for reconfigurable metasurfaces using phase-change materials, overcoming limitations of laser-induced switching.
Findings
Achieved near-infrared broadband tuning of perfect absorption.
Demonstrated localized and controlled crystallization of PCM layers.
Provided a detailed theoretical and multiphysics simulation framework.
Abstract
Metasurfaces allow for the spatiotemporal variation of amplitude, phase, and polarization of optical wavefronts. Implementation of active tunability of metasurfaces promises compact flat optics capable of reconfigurable wavefront shaping. Phase-change materials (PCMs), such as germanium telluride or germanium antimony telluride, are a prominent material class enabling reconfigurable metasurfaces due to their large refractive index change upon structural transition. However, commonly employed laser-induced switching of PCMs limits the achievable feature sizes and thus, restricts device miniaturization. Here, we propose thermal scanning-probe-induced local switching of germanium telluride to realize near-infrared metasurfaces with feature sizes far below what is achievable with diffraction-limited optical switching. Our design is based on a planar multilayer stack and does not require…
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