TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a copper metasurface capable of broadband anomalous beam steering from visible to near-infrared wavelengths, utilizing plasmonic mode hybridization and nanoantenna tuning for efficient unidirectional surface wave guidance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel copper metasurface design that achieves broadband beam steering with high efficiency by controlling plasmonic modes through nanoantenna geometry.
Findings
Achieves 65% average efficiency in beam steering.
Operates effectively across 600-900 nm wavelength range.
Provides insights into mode hybridization and nanoantenna tuning effects.
Abstract
In nanoscale photonic devices, the demand for multifunctionality from metasurface 2D optics increases rapidly. To explore fine-tuning in the design metric, we reinvestigated the trapezoid shape copper metasurface with Finite-Difference Time-Domain simulation for efficiently using linearly polarized light for two different functionalities. From the plasmonic band structure, we see how the degree of asymmetry in geometry affects the efficient resonance coupling of the traveling plasmonic modes, along with different types of mode hybridization profiles related to the nanoantenna's geometric shape. Tuning the nanoantenna's length, we can excite the effective plasmon mode supported by this configuration and guide out surface wave unidirectionally from the normal incident free-space light for visible to infrared range. Directed surface plasmon polariton has both antisymmetric and symmetric…
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