Metasurface spaceplates reach a millimeter-scale squeezed length of free space
Imon Kalyan, Raghvendra P. Chaudhary, and Nir Shitrit

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a metasurface spaceplate achieving a millimeter-scale squeezed length with a practical numerical aperture, significantly advancing miniaturization in flat optical systems.
Contribution
The authors present a novel metasurface spaceplate design that combines multilayer metasurfaces and coupling techniques to reach millimeter-scale compression with practical numerical aperture.
Findings
Achieved a squeezed length of 1.09 mm with a physical thickness of 80 μm.
Demonstrated a compression ratio of approximately 14 in the mid-wave infrared.
Developed a framework for optimizing multilayered spaceplates' transmission characteristics.
Abstract
Metasurfaces offer compact flat lenses (metalenses) for miniaturized imaging systems; however, the utmost miniaturization requires not only metalenses but also a substantial reduction of free space. A Spaceplate is a flat-optics element designed to mimic free-space propagation, effectively propagating light over a distance far exceeding its physical thickness, with the induced squeezed length serving as the key figure of merit. Despite substantial progress, most existing spaceplate designs have been fundamentally constrained by a trade-off between squeezed length and numerical aperture, and none has demonstrated a feasible structure supporting both a moderate numerical aperture and a millimeter-scale squeezed length. We report a metasurface spaceplate reaching the milestone of a millimeter-scale squeezed length with a practical numerical aperture. We achieved this by combining…
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