A Reconfigurable Active Huygens' Metalens

  • Ke Chen
  • , Yijun Feng*
  • , Francesco Monticone
  • , Junming Zhao
  • , Bo Zhu
  • , Tian Jiang
  • , Lei Zhang
  • , Yongjune Kim
  • , Xumin Ding
  • , Shuang Zhang
  • , Andrea Alù
  • , Cheng Wei Qiu
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Metasurfaces enable a new paradigm to control electromagnetic waves by manipulating subwavelength artificial structures within just a fraction of wavelength. Despite the rapid growth, simultaneously achieving low-dimensionality, high transmission efficiency, real-time continuous reconfigurability, and a wide variety of reprogrammable functions is still very challenging, forcing researchers to realize just one or few of the aforementioned features in one design. This study reports a subwavelength reconfigurable Huygens' metasurface realized by loading it with controllable active elements. The proposed design provides a unified solution to the aforementioned challenges of real-time local reconfigurability of efficient Huygens' metasurfaces. As one exemplary demonstration, a reconfigurable metalens at the microwave frequencies is experimentally realized, which, to the best of the knowledge, demonstrates for the first time that multiple and complex focal spots can be controlled simultaneously at distinct spatial positions and reprogrammable in any desired fashion, with fast response time and high efficiency. The presented active Huygens' metalens may offer unprecedented potentials for real-time, fast, and sophisticated electromagnetic wave manipulation such as dynamic holography, focusing, beam shaping/steering, imaging, and active emission control.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1606422
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume29
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 3 May 2017

Keywords

  • Huygens' metalens
  • active metasurfaces
  • dynamic focusing
  • reconfigurable

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A Reconfigurable Active Huygens' Metalens'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this