Publications by authors named "Thomas Zentgraf"

Realizing plasmonic nanogaps with a refractive index ( = 1) environment in metallic nanoparticle (NP) structures is highly attractive for a wide range of applications. So far in self-assembly-based approaches, without surface functionalization of metallic NPs, achieving such extremely small nanogaps is challenging. Surface functionalization introduces changes in the refractive index at nanogaps, which in turn deteriorates the desired plasmonic properties.

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  • Researchers studied topological edge states in double-wave chains using a modified Aubry-André-Harper model.
  • They discovered that different edge states can form in a driven-dissipative exciton polariton system due to optical nonlinearity, leading to multistability.
  • By stacking DW chains vertically, they created 2D multi-wave lattices that give rise to higher-order topological insulator corner states, which also demonstrate multistability in the nonlinear regime.
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Perfect vector vortex beams (PVVBs) have attracted considerable interest due to their peculiar optical features. PVVBs are typically generated through the superposition of perfect vortex beams, which suffer from the limited number of topological charges (TCs). Furthermore, dynamic control of PVVBs is desirable and has not been reported.

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We present strong enhancement of third harmonic generation in an amorphous silicon metasurface consisting of elliptical nano resonators. We show that this enhancement originates from a new type of multi-mode Fano mechanism. These 'Super-Fano' resonances are investigated numerically in great detail using full-wave simulations.

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Dispersion is present in every optical setup and is often an undesired effect, especially in nonlinear-optical experiments where ultrashort laser pulses are needed. Typically, bulky pulse compressors consisting of gratings or prisms are used to address this issue by precompensating the dispersion of the optical components. However, these devices are only able to compensate for a part of the dispersion (second-order dispersion).

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Highly directive antennas with the ability of shaping radiation patterns in desired directions are essential for efficient on-chip optical communication with reduced cross talk. In this paper, we design and optimize three distinct broadband traveling-wave tantalum pentoxide antennas exhibiting highly directional characteristics. Our antennas contain a director and reflector deposited on a glass substrate, which are excited by a dipole emitter placed in the feed gap between the two elements.

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Inspired by plant grafting, grafted vortex beams can be formed through grafting two or more helical phase profiles of optical vortex beams. Recently, grafted perfect vortex beams (GPVBs) have attracted much attention due to their unique optical properties and potential applications. However, the current method to generate and manipulate GPVBs requires a complex and bulky optical system, hindering further investigation and limiting its practical applications.

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While plasmonic particles can provide optical resonances in a wide spectral range from the lower visible up to the near-infrared, often, symmetry effects are utilized to obtain particular optical responses. By breaking certain spatial symmetries, chiral structures arise and provide robust chiroptical responses to these plasmonic resonances. Here, we observe strong chiroptical responses in the linear and nonlinear optical regime for chiral L-handed helicoid-III nanoparticles and quantify them by means of an asymmetric factor, the so-called g-factor.

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Metasurfaces have appeared as a versatile platform for miniaturized functional nonlinear optics due to their design freedom in tailoring wavefronts. The key factor that limits its application in functional devices is the low conversion efficiency. Recently, dielectric metasurfaces governed by either high-quality factor modes (quasi-bound states in the continuum) or Mie modes, enabling strong light-matter interaction, have become a prolific route to achieve high nonlinear efficiency.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores second harmonic generation (SHG) in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD), particularly WS, and how it is influenced by the polarization of excitation light.
  • By integrating plasmonic nanostructures with 1L-WS, they created a hybrid metasurface that alters the polarization dependency of SHG, which is impacted by both the lattice structure of the plasmonic array and the orientation of the 1L-WS.
  • The results reveal that this hybrid metasurface achieves significant enhancements in SHG signals—over 40 times greater in certain polarization states—while also demonstrating attenuation in typically allowed states, highlighting the role of symmetries in these systems.
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Quantum well (QW) heterostructures have been extensively used for the realization of a wide range of optical and electronic devices. Exploiting their potential for further improvement and development requires a fundamental understanding of their electronic structure. So far, the most commonly used experimental techniques for this purpose have been all-optical spectroscopy methods that, however, are generally averaging in momentum space.

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Nonlinear metasurface holography shows the great potential of metasurfaces to control the phase, amplitude, and polarization of light while simultaneously converting the frequency of the light. The possibility of tailoring the scattering properties of a coherent beam, as well as the scattering properties of nonlinear signals originating from the meta-atoms, facilitates a huge degree of freedom in beam shaping application. Recently, several approaches showed that virtual objects or any kind of optical information can be generated at a wavelength different from the laser input beam.

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Secret sharing is a well-established cryptographic primitive for storing highly sensitive information like encryption keys for encoded data. It describes the problem of splitting a secret into different shares, without revealing any information to its shareholders. Here, we demonstrate an all-optical solution for secret sharing based on metasurface holography.

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Nonlinear metasurfaces incorporate many of the functionalities of their linear counterparts such as wavefront shaping, but simultaneously they perform nonlinear optical transformations. This dual functionality leads to a rather unintuitive physical behavior which is still widely unexplored for many photonic applications. The nonlinear processes render some basic principles governing the functionality of linear metasurfaces.

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  • - Metasurface saturable absorbers can enhance mode-locking capabilities in lasers, leading to more consistent and stable ultrashort laser pulses.
  • - These advanced absorbers enable lasers to achieve high repetition rates and peak power outputs.
  • - They also support broadband operation, making them suitable for various types of laser cavities, including fiber and solid-state lasers.
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Metasurface holography has the advantage of realizing complex wavefront modulation by thin layers together with the progressive technique of computer-generated holographic imaging. Despite the well-known light parameters, such as amplitude, phase, polarization, and frequency, the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of a beam can be regarded as another degree of freedom. Here, we propose and demonstrate orbital angular momentum multiplexing at different polarization channels using a birefringent metasurface for holographic encryption.

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A switchable metasurface composed of plasmonic split ring resonators and a dye-doped liquid crystal is developed. The transmission of the metasurface in the infrared spectral range can be changed by illuminating the dye-doped liquid crystal with light in the visible spectral range. The effect is particularly efficient in the case of hybrid alignment of the liquid crystal, i.

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Metasurfaces possess the outstanding ability to tailor phase, amplitude, and even spectral responses of light with an unprecedented ultrahigh resolution and thus have attracted significant interest. Here, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a novel meta-device that integrates color printing and computer-generated holograms within a single-layer dielectric metasurface by modulating spectral and spatial responses at subwavelength scale, simultaneously. In our design, such metasurface appears as a microscopic color image under white light illumination, while encrypting two different holographic images that can be projected at the far-field when illuminated with red and green laser beams.

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Optical metasurfaces open new avenues for the precise wavefront control of light for integrated quantum technology. Here, we demonstrate a hybrid integrated quantum photonic system that is capable of entangling and disentangling two-photon spin states at a dielectric metasurface. Via the interference of single-photon pairs at a nanostructured dielectric metasurface, a path-entangled two-photon NOON state with circular polarization that exhibits a quantum HOM interference visibility of 86 ± 4% is generated.

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  • * The authors propose a solution by using magnesium's reaction kinetics during hydrogenation/dehydrogenation to create dynamic metasurface holograms with reconfigurable phase profiles.
  • * An iterative hologram algorithm, called the Fidoc method, enables real-time alterations of images through chemical processes, opening new possibilities for optical encryption and information processing.
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Optical metasurfaces, consisting of spatially variant meta-atoms, represent a new kind of optical platform for controlling the wavefront of light, with which many interesting applications, such as metalens and optical holography, have been successfully demonstrated. Further extension of the optical functionalities of metasurfaces into the nonlinear optical regime has led to unprecedented control over the local optical nonlinear generation processes. It has been shown that the nonlinear optical metasurface with achiral geometries could exhibit intrinsic optical activity in second- and third- harmonic generations.

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Nonlinear wavefront control is a crucial requirement in realizing nonlinear optical applications with metasurfaces. Numerous aspects of nonlinear frequency conversion and wavefront control have been demonstrated for plasmonic metasurfaces. However, several disadvantages limit their applicability in nonlinear nanophotonics, including high dissipative loss and low optical damage threshold.

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