Abstract The emergence of new technological needs in 5 G/6 G networking and broadband satellite internet access amplifies the demand for innovative wireless communication hardware, including high-performance low-profile transceivers. In this context, antennas based on metasurfaces – artificial surfaces engineered to manipulate electromagnetic waves at will – represent highly promising solutions. In this article, we introduce leaky-wave metasurface antennas operating at micro/millimeter-wave frequencies that are designed using the principles of quasi-bound states in the continuum, exploiting judiciously tailored spatial symmetries that enable fully customized radiation. Specifically, we unveil additional degrees of control over leaky-wave radiation by demonstrating pointwise control of the amplitude, phase and polarization state of the metasurface aperture fields by carefully breaking relevant symmetries with tailored perturbations. We design and experimentally demonstrate metasurface antenna prototypes showcasing a variety of functionalities advancing capabilities in wireless communications, including single-input multi-output and multi-input multi-output near-field focusing, as well as far-field beam shaping.
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Leaky-wave metasurfaces for integrated photonics
Metasurfaces have been rapidly advancing our command over the many degrees of freedom of light within compact, lightweight devices. However, so far, they have mostly been limited to manipulating light in free space. Grating couplers provide the opportunity of bridging far-field optical radiation and in-plane guided waves, and thus have become fundamental building blocks in photonic integrated circuits. However, their operation and degree of light control is much more limited than metasurfaces. Metasurfaces integrated on top of guided wave photonic systems have been explored to control the scattering of light off-chip with enhanced functionalities – namely, point-by-point manipulation of amplitude, phase or polarization. However, these efforts have so far been limited to controlling one or two optical degrees of freedom at best, and to device configurations much more complex compared to conventional grating couplers. Here, we introduce leaky-wave metasurfaces, which are based on symmetry-broken photonic crystal slabs that support quasi-bound states in the continuum. This platform has a compact form factor equivalent to the one of conventional grating couplers, but it provides full command over amplitude, phase and polarization (four optical degrees of freedom) across large apertures. We present experimental demonstrations of various functionalities for operation at λ= 1.55 μm based on leaky-wave metasurfaces, including devices for phase and amplitude control at a fixed polarization state, and devices controlling all four optical degrees of freedom. Our results merge the fields of guided and free-space optics under the umbrella of metasurfaces, exploiting the hybrid nature of quasi-bound states in the continuum, for opportunities to advance in disruptive ways imaging, communications, augmented reality, quantum optics, LIDAR, and integrated photonic systems.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2004685
- PAR ID:
- 10394213
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Nature nanotechnology
- ISSN:
- 1748-3387
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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