1 research outputs found
Polarization-Dependent Second Harmonic Diffraction from Resonant GaAs Metasurfaces
Resonant semiconductor metasurfaces
are an emerging versatile platform
for nonlinear photonics. In this work, we investigate second-harmonic
generation from metasurfaces consisting of two-dimensional square
arrays of gallium arsenide nanocylinders as a function of the polarization
of the fundamental wave. To this end, we perform nonlinear second
harmonic microscopy, where the pump wavelength is tuned to the resonances
of the metasurfaces. Furthermore, imaging the generated nonlinear
signal in Fourier space allows us to analyze the spatial properties
of the generated second harmonic. Our experiments reveal that the
second harmonic is predominantly emitted into the first diffraction
orders of the periodic arrangements, and that its intensity varies
with the polarization angle of the fundamental wave. While this can
be expected from the structure of the GaAs nonlinear tensor, the characteristics
of this variation itself are found to depend on the pump wavelength.
Interestingly, we show that the metasurface can reverse the polarization
dependence of the second harmonic with respect to an unstructured
GaAs wafer. These general observations are confirmed by numerical
simulations using a simplified model for the metasurface. Our results
provide valuable input for the development of metasurface-based classical
and quantum light sources based on parametric processes