Publications by authors named "Mikhail Shalaginov"

Article Synopsis
  • Ge-Sb-Se-Te chalcogenides are being studied as a new high-performance optical phase change material (PCM) to meet the integration needs of various photonic platforms.
  • The research focuses on using chemical solution deposition to create uniform layers of these materials, comparing their properties with those made using thermal evaporation.
  • Efforts are ongoing to enhance processing-combinations, aiming to produce high-quality optical PCMs that could lead to advancements in reconfigurable photonic devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Metasurfaces, which consist of arrays of ultrathin planar nanostructures (also known as "meta-atoms"), offer immense potential for use in high-performance optical devices through the precise manipulation of electromagnetic waves with subwavelength spatial resolution. However, designing meta-atom structures that simultaneously meet multiple functional requirements (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this Letter, we adapt the direct search method to metasurface optimization. We show that the direct search algorithm, when coupled with deep learning techniques for free-form meta-atom generation, offers a computationally efficient optimization approach for metasurface optics. As an example, we apply the approach to optimization of achromatic metalenses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hyperbolic metamaterials (HMMs) have attracted significant attention due to the profound manipulation of the photonic density of states, resulting in the efficient optoelectronic devices with the enhanced light-matter interaction. HMMs are conventionally built on rigid large-size substrates with poor conformability and the absence of flexibility. Here, we demonstrate a grating collageable HMM (GCHMM), which is composed of eight alternating layers of Au and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and PMMA grating nanostructure containing quantum dots (QDs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We demonstrate a large-area fabrication process for optical metasurfaces utilizing reusable SiN on Si nanostencils. To improve the yield of the nanostencil fabrication, we partially etch the front-side SiN layer to transfer the metasurface pattern from the resist to the nanostencil membrane, preserving the integrity of the membrane during the subsequent potassium hydroxide etch. To enhance the reliability and resolution of metasurface fabrication using the nanostencil, we spin coat a sacrificial layer of resist to precisely determine the gap between the nanostencil and the metasurface substrate for the subsequent liftoff.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Active metasurfaces offer advanced optical technology that is smaller, more durable, and easier to manufacture compared to traditional optics.
  • Optical phase-change materials (PCMs), especially GeSbSeTe (GSST), are particularly effective for these metasurfaces due to their ability to change optical properties non-volatilely and significantly.
  • The research demonstrated highly tunable active metasurfaces with a large range of optical adjustments and the ability to steer light dynamically without sensitivity to polarization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Active metasurfaces, whose optical properties can be modulated post-fabrication, have emerged as an intensively explored field in recent years. The efforts to date, however, still face major performance limitations in tuning range, optical quality, and efficiency, especially for non-mechanical actuation mechanisms. In this paper, we introduce an active metasurface platform combining phase tuning in the full 2π range and diffraction-limited performance using an all-dielectric, low-loss architecture based on optical phase change materials (O-PCMs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Metasurfaces are innovative optical devices that can manipulate light in compact forms, unlike traditional bulky systems.
  • The design process for meta-atoms, which are the basic components of metasurfaces, usually involves extensive trial and error, requiring a lot of computational power to explore a wide range of designs.
  • This paper introduces a deep learning model based on convolutional neural networks (CNNs) that significantly speeds up the design process of meta-atoms, allowing for quick predictions of their optical responses, making it ideal for rapid design needs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wide field-of-view (FOV) optical functionality is crucial for implementation of advanced imaging and image projection devices. Conventionally, wide FOV operation is attained with complicated assembly of multiple optical elements known as "fisheye lenses". Here we present a novel metalens design capable of performing diffraction-limited focusing and imaging over an unprecedented near 180° angular FOV.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optical phase change materials (O-PCMs), a unique group of materials featuring exceptional optical property contrast upon a solid-state phase transition, have found widespread adoption in photonic applications such as switches, routers and reconfigurable meta-optics. Current O-PCMs, such as Ge-Sb-Te (GST), exhibit large contrast of both refractive index (Δn) and optical loss (Δk), simultaneously. The coupling of both optical properties fundamentally limits the performance of many applications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Solid-state quantum emitters are in high demand for emerging technologies such as advanced sensing and quantum information processing. Generally, these emitters are not sufficiently bright for practical applications, and a promising solution consists in coupling them to plasmonic nanostructures. Plasmonic nanostructures support broadband modes, making it possible to speed up the fluorescence emission in room-temperature emitters by several orders of magnitude.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mid-infrared (mid-IR) is a strategically important band for numerous applications ranging from night vision to biochemical sensing. Here we theoretically analyzed and experimentally realized a Huygens metasurface platform capable of fulfilling a diverse cross-section of optical functions in the mid-IR. The meta-optical elements were constructed using high-index chalcogenide films deposited on fluoride substrates: the choices of wide-band transparent materials allow the design to be scaled across a broad infrared spectrum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We study plasmonic waveguides with dielectric cores and hyperbolic multilayer claddings. The proposed design provides better performance in terms of propagation length and mode confinement in comparison to conventional designs, such as metal-insulator-metal and insulator-metal-insulator plasmonic waveguides. We show that the proposed structures support long-range surface plasmon modes, which exist when the permittivity of the core matches the transverse effective permittivity component of the metamaterial cladding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Engineering plasmonic metamaterials with anisotropic optical dispersion allows for customization of metamaterial waveguide properties.
  • The study focuses on plasmonic waveguides featuring dielectric cores and multilayer metal-dielectric claddings with hyperbolic dispersion, calculating resonant eigenmodes without homogenization.
  • Findings reveal that at specific resonant widths, waveguide modes couple with cladding eigenmodes, leading to strong absorption; avoiding these widths can mitigate absorption issues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Strongly anisotropic media with hyperbolic dispersion can be used for claddings of plasmonic waveguides (PWs). In order to analyze the fundamental properties of such waveguides, we analytically study 1D waveguides arranged from a hyperbolic metamaterial (HMM) in a HMM-Insulator-HMM (HIH) structure. We show that HMM claddings give flexibility in designing the properties of HIH waveguides.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a first-principles study of structural and phase stability in three different structures of perovskite-types KMgH(3) according to H position. While electronic and optical properties were measured only for stable perovskite-type KMgH(3), our calculated structural parameters are found in good agreement with experiment and other theoretical results. We also study the electronic charge density space distribution contours in the (200), (101), and (100) crystallographic planes, which gives better insight picture of chemical bonding between K-H, K-Mg-H, and Mg-H.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF