4.6 Article

A tunable color filter using a hybrid metasurface composed of ZnO nanopillars and Ag nanoholes

Journal

NANOSCALE ADVANCES
Volume 4, Issue 17, Pages 3624-3633

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2na00286h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Basic and Applied Foundation of Guangdong Province [2021A1515012217]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFA0705004]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11690031]

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This research proposes the design of symmetrical and asymmetrical tunable color filters using hybrid metasurface nanostructures, operating in the visible wavelength range. The filters show remarkable tunability of the resonant wavelength by adjusting the distance between nanostructures, achieving high transmission intensity and polarization-dependent/independent characteristics. The stability of the design has been demonstrated under different disturbances and angles of incident light, and the resonant wavelengths can be red-shifted by increasing the ambient refraction index. This design has significant implications for optoelectronic applications such as high-resolution color displays and efficient biosensors.
We propose the design of symmetrical and asymmetrical tunable color filters (TCFs) by using hybrid metasurface nanostructures in the visible wavelength range. They are composed of circular zinc oxide (ZnO) nanopillars and silver (Ag) nanoholes on a silica substrate. These TCFs exhibit ultrahigh transmission intensity over 90%, different tuning ranges, and polarization-dependent/independent characteristics. By changing the distance between the ZnO nanopillars and silica substrate, the resonant wavelength of TCFs could be tuned remarkably. Moreover, we also demonstrate the stability of TCFs under different disturbances and angles of incident light. Furthermore, the resonant wavelengths are red-shifted by increasing the ambient refraction index. TCFs exhibit great tunability and ultrahigh transmission intensity up to 100%. This design opens up an avenue to widespread optoelectronic applications, such as ultrahigh resolution color displays, high-efficiency biosensors, pressure sensors, and selective color filters.

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