8 research outputs found
Multiplexed Holograms by Surface Plasmon Propagation and Polarized Scattering
Thanks
to the superiority in controlling the optical wave fronts,
plasmonic nanostructures have led to various striking applications,
among which metasurface holograms have been well developed and endowed
with strong multiplexing capability. Here, we report a new design
of multiplexed plasmonic hologram, which allows for reconstruction
of multiple holographic images in free space by scatterings of surface
plasmon polariton (SPP) waves in different propagation directions.
Besides, the scattered polarization states can be further modulated
by arranging the orientations of nanoscatterers. By incorporation
of the SPP propagation and polarized scattering, a 4-fold hologram
with low crosstalk is successfully demonstrated, which breaks the
limitation of only two orthogonal states in conventional polarization
multiplexers. Moreover, our design using the near-field SPP as reference
wave holds the advantage for compact integration. This holographic
approach is expected to inspire new photonic designs with enhanced
information capacity and integratability
Supplementary document for Ultrabroadband second harmonic generation based on dispersion-engineered LNOI waveguide - 6125642.pdf
numerical analysis in detail
Supplementary document for Stable Q-switched and Femtosecond Mode-locked Erbium-doped Fiber Laser based on CuSe Nanosheets Saturable Absorber - 6882781.pdf
Supplemental Documen
Bound-extended mode transition in type-II synthetic photonic Weyl heterostructures
Photonic structures with Weyl points (WPs), including type-I and type-II, promise nontrivial surface modes and intriguing light manipulations for their three-dimensional topological bands. While previous studies mainly focus on exploring WPs in a uniform Weyl structure, here we establish Weyl heterostructures (i.e., a nonuniform Weyl lattice) with different rotational orientations in the synthetic dimension by nanostructured photonic waveguides. In this work, we unveil a transition between bound and extended modes on the interface of type-II Weyl heterostructures by tuning their rotational phases, despite the reversed topological order across the interface. This mode transition is also manifested from the total transmission to total reflection at the interface. All of these unconventional effects are attributed to the tilted dispersion of type-II Weyl band structure that can lead to mismatched bands and gaps across the interface. As a comparison, the type-I Weyl heterostructures lack the phase transition due to the untilted band structure. This work establishes a flexible scheme of artificial Weyl heterostructures that opens a new avenue towards high-dimensional topological effects and significantly enhances our capabilities in on-chip light manipulations
Observation of topology transition in Floquet non-Hermitian skin effects in silicon photonics
Non-Hermitian physics has greatly enriched our understanding of nonequilibrium phenomena and uncovered novel effects such as the non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE) that has profoundly revolutionized the field. NHSE is typically predicted in systems with nonreciprocal couplings which, however, are difficult to realize in experiments. Without nonreciprocal couplings, the NHSE can also emerge in systems with coexisting gauge fields and loss or gain (e.g., in Floquet non-Hermitian systems). However, such Floquet NHSE remains largely unexplored in experiments. Here, we realize the Floquet NHSEs in periodically modulated optical waveguides integrated on a silicon photonics platform. By engineering the artificial gauge fields induced by the periodical modulation, we observe various Floquet NHSEs and unveil their rich topological transitions. Remarkably, we discover the transitions between the normal unipolar NHSEs and an unconventional bipolar NHSE which is accompanied by the directional reversal of the NHSEs. The underlying physics is revealed by the band winding in complex quasienergy space which undergoes a topology change from isolated loops with the same winding to linked loops with opposite windings. Our work unfolds a new route toward Floquet NHSEs originating from the interplay between gauge fields and dissipation effects and offers fundamentally new ways for steering light and other waves