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Creators/Authors contains: "Schuller, Jon A."

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  1. Abstract

    Metasurface‐based optical elements offer a wide design space for miniature and lightweight optical applications. Typically, metasurface optical elements transform an incident light beam into a desired output waveform. Recent demonstrations of light‐emitting metasurfaces highlight the potential for directly producing desired output waveforms via metasurface‐mediated spontaneous emission. In this work, reciprocal finite‐difference time‐domain (FDTD) simulations and machine learning are used to enable the inverse design of highly unidirectional photoluminescent III‐Nitride quantum well metasurfaces capable of directivep‐,s‐, or combinedp‐ ands‐ polarized emission at arbitrary angles. In comparison with previous intuition‐guided designs using the same quantum well architectures, the inverse design approach enables new polarization capabilities and experimentally demonstrated improvements in directivity of 54%. An analysis of ways in which the inverse design both validates and contradicts previous intuition‐guided design heuristics is presented. Ultimately, the combination of reciprocal simulations and efficient global optimization (EGO) grants remarkable improvements in emission directivity and results in full control over the polarization and momentum of emitted light, including simultaneous directional emission ofs‐ andp‐polarized light.

     
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  2. null (Ed.)
  3. Chang-Hasnain, Connie J. ; Zhou, Weimin ; Faraon, Andrei (Ed.)
  4. Abstract In this work, reconfigurable metafilm absorbers based on indium silicon oxide (ISO) were investigated. The metafilm absorbers consist of nanoscale metallic resonator arrays on metal-insulator-metal (MIM) multilayer structures. The ISO was used as an active tunable layer embedded in the MIM cavities. The tunable metafilm absorbers with ISO were then fabricated and characterized. A maximum change in the reflectance of 57% and up to 620 nm shift in the resonance wavelength were measured. 
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  5. The conference was held in Burlingame, California United States 29 July–1 August 2019. 
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