4.7 Article

A learning based approach for designing extended unit cell metagratings

Journal

NANOPHOTONICS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 345-358

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2021-0540

Keywords

color filters and splitter; deep learning; evolutionary optimization; inverse design; metagratings; metasurface design

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology [SN/NM/NS-65/2 016]

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This study introduces a deep learning-based design methodology for the inverse design of extended unit-cell metagratings. Unlike previous approaches, this method learns the spectral response of the metagrating across its reflected and transmitted orders, accelerating the optimization of multiple functionalities. The proposed methodology is not limited to proof-of-concept demonstrations and can be widely applied to nanophotonic system design.
The possibility of arbitrary spatial control of incident wavefronts with the subwavelength resolution has driven research into dielectric optical metasurfaces in the last decade. The unit-cell based metasurface design approach that relies on a library of single element responses is known to result in reduced efficiency attributed to the inadequate accounting of the coupling effects between meta-atoms. Metasurfaces with extended unit-cells containing multiple resonators can improve design outcomes but their design requires extensive numerical computing and optimizations. We report a deep learning based design methodology for the inverse design of extended unit-cell metagratings. In contrast to previous reports, our approach learns the metagrating spectral response across its reflected and transmitted orders. Through systematic exploration, we discover network architectures and training dataset sampling strategies that allow such learning without requiring extensive ground-truth generation. The one-time investment of model creation can then be used to significantly accelerate numerical optimization of multiple functionalities as demonstrated by considering the inverse design of various spectral and polarization dependent splitters and filters. The proposed methodology is not limited to these proof-of-concept demonstrations and can be broadly applied to meta-atom-based nanophotonic system design and in realising the next generation of metasurface functionalities with improved performance.

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