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Applying coatings that suppress the radiance changes related to temperature-dependent blackbody emission enables temperature-independent optical and sensing systems. Phase-change materials can significantly modify their optical properties within their transition window, but compensating for the large mid-wave infrared (MWIR, 3–5 µm) variation is demanding: blackbody radiance at 3 µm increases nearly 10-fold as the temperature rises from 30 °C to 80 °C. Vanadium dioxide VO2, whose insulator–metal transition offers a sharp contrast and a low-loss insulating state, is attractive for applications in thermal management, but simple thin-film designs cannot provide full compensation. We demonstrate metasurface coatings that provide this compensation by constructing an array of metal–VO2–metal antennas tuned to maintain constant thermal emission at a target wavelength over a temperature range of 30 °C to 80 °C. Antennas of several lateral sizes are combined, so their individual resonances collectively track the Planck change. This design provides both optical contrast and the correct temperature derivative, which are unattainable with homogeneous layers. Our approach results in a negligible apparent temperature change of the metasurface across the 30–80 °C range, effectively masking thermal signatures from MWIR detectors stemming from the low losses of VO2.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2027
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The ability to treat the surface of an object with coatings that counteract the change in radiance resulting from the object’s blackbody emission can be very useful for applications requiring temperature-independent radiance behavior. Such a response is difficult to achieve with most materials except when using phase-change materials, which can undergo a drastic change in their optical response, nullifying the changes in blackbody radiation across a narrow range of temperatures. We report on the theoretical design, giving the possibility of extending the temperature range for temperature-independent radiance coatings by utilizing multiple layers, each comprising a different phase-change material. These designed multilayer coatings are based on thin films of samarium nickelate, vanadium dioxide, and doped vanadium oxide and cover temperatures ranging from room temperature to up to 140 °C. The coatings are numerically engineered in terms of layer thickness and doping, with each successive layer comprising a phase-change material with progressively higher transition temperatures than those below. Our calculations demonstrate that the optimized thin film multilayers exhibit a negligible change in the apparent temperature of the engineered surface. These engineered multilayer films can be used to mask an object’s thermal radiation emission against thermal imaging systems.more » « less
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We report on the structural, chemical, and optical properties of titanium sesquioxide Ti2O3 thin films on single-crystal sapphire substrates by pulsed laser deposition. The thin film of Ti2O3 on sapphire exhibits light absorption of around 25%–45% in the wavelength range of 2–10 μm. Here, we design an infrared photodetector structure based on Ti2O3, enhanced by a resonant metasurface, to improve its light absorption in mid-wave and long-wave infrared windows. We show that light absorption in the mid-wave infrared window (wavelength 3–5 μm) in the active Ti2O3 layer can be significantly enhanced from 30%–40% to more than 80% utilizing a thin resonant metasurface made of low-loss silicon, facilitating efficient scattering in the active layer. Furthermore, we compare the absorptance of the Ti2O3 layer with that of conventional semiconductors, such as InSb, InAs, and HgCdTe, operating in the infrared range with a wavelength of 2–10 μm and demonstrate that the absorption in the Ti2O3 film is significantly higher than in these conventional semiconductors due to the narrow-bandgap characteristics of Ti2O3. The proposed designs can be used to tailor the wavelengths of photodetection across the near- and mid-infrared ranges.more » « less
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