Phase-change material enables active tuning of lattice Kerker effect

The phenomenon of completely eliminated backscattering in a hypothetical magnetic sphere is called the Kerker effect. It has been generalized in nanophotonics and meta-optics, and has recently been applied to such functionalities as scattering management and perfect transmission, reflection or absorption.

One of the most interesting generalizations is the lattice Kerker effect in periodic structures. By varying one of the array periods, the electric dipole surface lattice resonance (ED-SLR) of the array and the magnetic dipole resonance (MDR) of single nanoparticles can be spectrally overlapped, leading to strong suppression of reflection or backward scattering from the array as a whole.

A research group led by Dr. Li Guangyuan from the Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences realized active tuning of the lattice Kerker effect by introducing a metasurface composed of germanium-antimony-tellurium (GeSbTe or GST) nanorods.

The study was published in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics on Jan. 25.

GST is a typical phase-change material that can be switched between amorphous and crystalline phases with many unique merits, especially the nonvolatile, rapid and reversible switching characteristics.

In this study, the researchers realized the transition from the ED-SLR to the lattice Kerker effect by changing the GST crystalline fraction. Since the ED-SLR and the lattice Kerker effect correspond to near-unity and suppressed reflection, respectively, this transition leads to multilevel tuning of reflection, transmission and absorption with modulation depths above 86 percent.

In addition, the team also made use of MDR redshifts and achieved broadband and multilevel tuning of transmission with modulation depth of 87 percent over a broadband range of 588 nm.

“The proposed GST metasurface featuring nonvolatile, rapid and reversible transition from ED-SLR to the lattice Kerker effect will find intriguing applications in reconfigurable directional scattering, all-optical modulation and switching,” said Dr. Li.

More information:
Lei Xiong et al, Active Tuning of Resonant Lattice Kerker Effect, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics (2022). DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/ac4ec5

Provided by
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Citation:
Phase-change material enables active tuning of lattice Kerker effect (2022, January 28)

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