Publications by authors named "Arseniy I Kuznetsov"

J-aggregates are supramolecular assemblies of dyes exhibiting strong absorption and fluorescence with narrow linewidths, as well as large optical nonlinearities, induced by the formation of largely delocalized molecular excitons. The degree of cooperativity achievable in J-aggregates ensembles, however, is limited by local disorder and thermally induced decoherence effects. A way to overcome these limitations and increase molecular exciton delocalization and coherence is to couple the ensemble of highly ordered molecular dipoles to a common electromagnetic mode in an optical resonator.

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Monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) demonstrate plenty of unique properties due to the band structure. Symmetry breaking brings second-order susceptibility to meaningful values resulting in the enhancement of corresponding nonlinear effects. Cooling the TMDC films to cryogenic temperatures leads to the emergence of two distinct photoluminescence peaks caused by the exciton and trion formation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Metasurfaces provide precise control over light at the nanoscale, enabling manipulation of various optical properties like phase, amplitude, and polarization.
  • They can also dynamically change light absorption and emission characteristics, broadening applications to areas such as optoelectronics, displays, and solar cells.
  • This Review synthesizes current research on metasurfaces specific to optoelectronic devices and highlights future directions for both academic and industrial research.
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  • Time-varying optical metasurfaces can change how light behaves dynamically, making them more interesting than static systems.
  • This study looks at using structured femtosecond laser pumping to control a specific mode in a semiconductor metasurface, which helps in understanding light manipulation.
  • The findings show a detailed way to control light in both space and time while also shedding light on how these extended modes in nonlocal metasurfaces are excited.
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Metasurfaces have recently risen to prominence in optical research, providing unique functionalities that can be used for imaging, beam forming, holography, polarimetry, and many more, while keeping device dimensions small. Despite the fact that a vast range of basic metasurface designs has already been thoroughly studied in the literature, the number of metasurface-related papers is still growing at a rapid pace, as metasurface research is now spreading to adjacent fields, including computational imaging, augmented and virtual reality, automotive, display, biosensing, nonlinear, quantum and topological optics, optical computing, and more. At the same time, the ability of metasurfaces to perform optical functions in much more compact optical systems has triggered strong and constantly growing interest from various industries that greatly benefit from the availability of miniaturized, highly functional, and efficient optical components that can be integrated in optoelectronic systems at low cost.

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Solid state single-photon sources with high brightness and long coherence time are promising qubit candidates for modern quantum technology. To prevent decoherence processes and preserve the integrity of the qubits, decoupling the emitters from their surrounding environment is essential. To this end, interfacing single photon emitters (SPEs) with high-finesse cavities is required, especially in the strong coupling regime, when the interaction between emitters can be mediated by cavity fields.

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Freeform nanostructures have the potential to support complex resonances and their interactions, which are crucial for achieving desired spectral responses. However, the design optimization of such structures is nontrivial and computationally intensive. Furthermore, the current "black box" design approaches for freeform nanostructures often neglect the underlying physics.

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We present a dual-resonance nanostructure made of a titanium dioxide (TiO) subwavelength grating to enhance the color downconversion efficiency of CdZnSeS colloidal quantum dots (QDs) emitting at ∼530 nm when excited with a blue light at ∼460 nm. A large mode volume can be created within the QD layer by the hybridization of the grating resonances and waveguide modes, resulting in large absorption and emission enhancements. Particularly, we achieved polarized light emission with a maximum photoluminescence enhancement of ∼140 times at a specific angular direction and a total enhancement of ∼34 times within a 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • Liquid crystal spatial light modulators (SLMs) can modify light wavefronts but suffer from large pixel sizes, limiting their use in holographic displays due to inter-pixel crosstalk factors.
  • Integrating metasurfaces, made of resonant nanoantennas with thin liquid crystals, offers a solution by enabling smaller pixels and full light control, but existing designs often require additional alignment layers that hinder efficiency.
  • A new approach eliminates the alignment layer by using nanoantennas to control liquid crystal orientation, resulting in lower voltage requirements, faster switching times, and improved performance for applications like VR/AR, LiDAR, and 3D holography.
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All-dielectric optical metasurfaces can locally control the amplitude and phase of light at the nanoscale, enabling arbitrary wavefront shaping. However, lack of postfabrication tunability has limited the true potential of metasurfaces for many applications. Here, we utilize a thin liquid crystal (LC) layer as a tunable medium surrounding the metasurface to achieve a phase-only spatial light modulator (SLM) with high reflection in the visible frequency, exhibiting active and continuous resonance tuning with associated 2π phase control and uncoupled amplitude.

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Metasurfaces are artificially structured surfaces able to control the properties of light at subwavelength scales. While, initially, they have been proposed as means to control classical optical fields, they are now emerging as nanoscale sources of quantum light, in particular of entangled photons with versatile properties. Geometric resonances in metasurfaces have been recently used to engineer the frequency spectrum of entangled photons, but the emission directivity was so far less studied.

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Digital camera sensors use color filters on photodiodes to achieve color selectivity. As the color filters and photosensitive silicon layers are separate elements, these sensors suffer from optical cross-talk, which sets limits to the minimum pixel size. Here, we report hybrid silicon-aluminum nanostructures in the extreme limit of zero distance between color filters and sensors.

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Article Synopsis
  • All-dielectric metasurfaces allow precise manipulation of light's amplitude and phase at very small scales, but typically lack the ability to be adjusted after they are made.
  • Researchers are now using phase-change materials (PCMs), specifically antimony sulfide (Sb S), to enable these metasurfaces to be switched and programmed post-fabrication, achieving significant changes in optical properties.
  • The newly demonstrated programmable Huygens' metasurface shows promising results in phase modulation and high efficiency in the visible light range, paving the way for advanced applications like adaptive optics and LiDAR technology.
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Metasurfaces supporting optical bound states in the continuum (BICs) are emerging as simple and compact optical cavities to realize polarization-vortex lasers. The winding of the polarization around the singularity defines topological charges which are generally set by the cavity design and cannot be altered without changing geometrical parameters. Here, a subwavelength-thin phase-change halide perovskite BIC metasurface functioning as a tunable polarization vortex microlaser is demonstrated.

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Emerging immersive visual communication technologies require light sources with complex functionality for dynamic control of polarization, directivity, wavefront, spectrum, and intensity of light. Currently, this is mostly achieved by free space bulk optic elements, limiting the adoption of these technologies. Flat optics based on artificially structured metasurfaces that operate at the sub-wavelength scale are a viable solution, however, their integration into electrically driven devices remains challenging.

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Nanostructures exhibiting optical resonances (so-called nanoantennas) have strong potential for applications in color printing and filtering with sub-wavelength resolution. While small scale demonstrations of these systems are interesting as a proof-of-concept, their large scale and volume fabrication requires deeper analysis and further development for industrial adoption. Here, we evaluate the color quality produced by large size nanoantenna arrays fabricated on a 12-in.

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Resonant metasurfaces provide a unique platform for enhancing multiwave nonlinear interactions. However, the difficulties over mode matching and material transparency place significant challenges in the enhancement of these multiwave processes. Here we demonstrate efficient nonlinear sum-frequency generation (SFG) in multiresonant GaP metasurfaces based on guided-wave bound-state in the continuum resonances.

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Spatial light modulators (SLMs) are the most relevant technology for dynamic wavefront manipulation. They find diverse applications ranging from novel displays to optical and quantum communications. Among commercial SLMs for phase modulation, Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCoS) offers the smallest pixel size and, thus, the most precise phase mapping and largest field of view (FOV).

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Huygens' metasurfaces are transparent arrays of nanostructures that enable phase-front manipulation. This is achieved by simultaneous excitation of electric dipole (ED) and magnetic dipole (MD) resonances with equal amplitudes and phases in the constituent meta-atoms. In usual designs, the size changes of the meta-atoms, necessary to map the phase front, can detune the overlapping of ED and MD resonances, decreasing the transmission and limiting the operating bandwidth.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bound-states-in-the-continuum (BIC) are a new concept in nanophotonics with potential uses in areas like hyperspectral imaging and lasing without mirrors.
  • The study presents a method for observing true BIC modes on silicon nanoantennas using electron energy loss spectroscopy, which allows for the mapping of their near-field localization.
  • By altering the antenna symmetry, quasi-BIC resonances are revealed that significantly enhance localized light emission, potentially leading to practical applications in efficient quantum emitter excitation.
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Colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are a promising gain material for solution-processed, wavelength-tunable lasers, with potential application in displays, communications, and biomedical devices. In this work, we combine a CQD film with an array of nanoantennas, made of titanium dioxide cylinders, to achieve lasing via bound states in the continuum (BICs). Here, the BICs are symmetry-protected cavity modes with giant quality factors, arising from slab waveguide modes in the planar CQD film, coupled to the periodic nanoantenna array.

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High harmonic generation (HHG) opens a window on the fundamental science of strong-field light-mater interaction and serves as a key building block for attosecond optics and metrology. Resonantly enhanced HHG from hot spots in nanostructures is an attractive route to overcoming the well-known limitations of gases and bulk solids. Here, we demonstrate a nanoscale platform for highly efficient HHG driven by intense mid-infrared laser pulses: an ultra-thin resonant gallium phosphide (GaP) metasurface.

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Dielectric nanostructures have demonstrated optical antenna effects due to Mie resonances. Previous work has exhibited enhancements in absorption, emission rates and directionality with practical limitations. In this paper, we present a Si mix antenna array to achieve a trifecta enhancement of ∼1200-fold with a Purcell factor of ∼47.

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Article Synopsis
  • - We developed gallium phosphide (GaP) nano-waveguides capable of generating second harmonic light around 655 nm using a technique called modal phase matching.
  • - By adjusting the waveguide widths and pump wavelengths, we achieved a high internal conversion efficiency of 0.4% Wcm for continuous-wave pumping at 1283.5 nm, the best reported so far for GaP waveguides.
  • - Our findings also showed that the SHG wavelength can be temperature-tuned, enhancing the potential for integrated photonic systems in both classical and quantum technologies.
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