Spatially Controlled All-Optical Switching of Liquid-Crystal-Empowered Metasurfaces Articles uri icon

authors

  • Beddoe, Maximilian
  • Walden, Sarah L.
  • Miljevic, Slobodan
  • Pidgayko, Dmitry
  • Zou, Chengjun
  • Minovich, Alexander E.
  • BARREDA GOMEZ, ANGELA INMACULADA
  • Pertsch, Thomas
  • Staude, Isabelle

publication date

  • January 2025

start page

  • 963

end page

  • 970

issue

  • 2

volume

  • 12

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 2330-4022

abstract

  • Embedding metasurfaces in liquid crystal (LC) cells is a promising technique for realizing tunable optical functionalities. Here, we demonstrate spatially controlled all-optical switching of the optical response of a homogeneous silicon nanocylinder metasurface featuring various Mie-type resonances in the spectral range between 670 and 720 nm integrated in a nematic LC cell. The initial alignment of the LC molecules is controlled by photoalignment layers, where the alignment direction is defined by homogeneous exposure with linearly polarized light at a 450 nm wavelength. Exposure of the photoalignment layer with the same light, whose polarization is rotated by 90 degrees , induces a local change in the direction of the LC alignment and modulates the optical response of the metasurface. The resulting spatially dependent optical properties of the metasurface system are characterized by hyperspectral imaging. The described technique allows the nonvolatile creation of complex spatio-spectral response functions with a spatial resolution of 20 ¿m. Moreover, we demonstrate that the response of the LC-integrated metasurface can be switched multiple times by subsequent exposures with alternating orthogonal polarizations. Finally, we show that the images can be temporarily erased by heating the sample above the critical LC transition temperature, where the LC transitions to its isotropic phase. The demonstrated approach represents the controlling-light-by-light concept, an alternative to electro-optical or electromechanical control methods, which require complicated electronic architectures for spatially resolved modulation. Our results hold significant potential for applications such as next-generation displays or spatial light modulators that require spatial control of a tunable, tailored optical response.

subjects

  • Physics

keywords

  • tunable metasurfaces; active tuning; liquid crystals; photoalignment; mie-resonances; all-dielectric nanophotonics