4.7 Article

Asymmetric phase modulation of light with parity-symmetry broken metasurfaces

Journal

OPTICA
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 1287-1294

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group
DOI: 10.1364/OPTICA.495681

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In this paper, we use temporal coupled mode theory to predict the location of phase singularities and control the induced phase modulation of light in wavefront-shaping devices. The study shows that breaking spatial inversion symmetry lifts the degeneracy of reflection zeros and introduces a complex singularity with a positive imaginary part. Our work establishes a general framework for predicting and studying the response of resonant systems in photonics and metaoptics.
The design of wavefront-shaping devices is conventionally approached using real-frequency modeling. However, since these devices interact with light through radiative channels, they are by default non-Hermitian objects having complex eigenvalues (poles and zeros) that are marked by phase singularities in a complex frequency plane. Here, by using temporal coupled mode theory, we derive analytical expressions allowing to predict the location of these phase singularities in a complex plane and as a result, allowing to control the induced phase modulation of light. In particular, we show that spatial inversion symmetry breaking-implemented herein by controlling the coupling efficiency between input and output radiative channels of two-port components called metasurfaces-lifts the degeneracy of reflection zeros in forward and backward directions, and introduces a complex singularity with a positive imaginary part necessary for a full 2 pi-phase gradient. Our work establishes a general framework to predict and study the response of resonant systems in photonics and metaoptics. (c) 2023 Optica Publishing Group under the terms of the Optica Open Access Publishing Agreement

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