Four ultrathin metalenses developed by University of Washington researchers and visualized under a microscope. Image: Liu et al., Nano Letters, 2018.
Four ultrathin metalenses developed by University of Washington researchers and visualized under a microscope. Image: Liu et al., Nano Letters, 2018.

In optics, the era of glass lenses may be waning. Over recent years, physicists and engineers have been designing, constructing and testing different types of ultrathin materials that could replace the thick glass lenses used today in cameras and imaging systems.

Critically, these engineered lenses – known as metalenses – are not made of glass. Instead, they consist of materials constructed at the nanoscale into arrays of columns or fin-like structures. These formations can interact with incoming light, directing it toward a single focal point for imaging purposes.

But even though metalenses are much thinner than glass lenses, they still rely on ‘high aspect ratio’ structures, in which the column or fin-like structures are much taller than they are wide, making them prone to collapsing and falling over. Furthermore, these structures have always needed to be similar in thickness to the wavelength of light they're interacting with – until now.

In a paper in Nano Letters, a team from the University of Washington (UW) and the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan report the construction of functional metalenses that are one-tenth to one-half the thickness of the wavelengths of light that they focus. Their metalenses, which they constructed out of layered 2D materials, are as thin as 190nm.

"This is the first time that someone has shown that it is possible to create a metalens out of 2D materials," said senior and co-corresponding author Arka Majumdar, a UW assistant professor of physics and of electrical and computer engineering. Their design principles can be used for the creation of metalenses with more complex, tunable features, added Majumdar, who is also a faculty researcher with the UW's Molecular Engineering & Sciences Institute.

Majumdar's team has been studying the design principles of metalenses for years, and previously constructed metalenses for full-color imaging. But the challenge in this project was to overcome an inherent design limitation in metalenses: in order for a metalens material to interact with light and achieve optimal imaging quality, the material had to be roughly the same thickness as the wavelength of light in that material.

In mathematical terms, this restriction ensures that a full zero to two-pi phase shift range is achievable, which guarantees that any optical element can be designed. For example, a metalens for light with a wavelength of 500nm – which is green light in the visual spectrum – would need to be about 500nm in thickness, though this thickness can decrease as the refractive index of the material increases.

Majumdar and his team have now synthesized functional metalenses that are much thinner than this theoretical limit – one-tenth to one-half the wavelength. First, they constructed the metalens out of sheets of layered 2D materials, using widely studied 2D materials such as hexagonal boron nitride and molybdenum disulfide. A single atomic layer of these materials provides a very small phase shift, unsuitable for efficient lensing. So the team used multiple layers to increase the thickness, although the thickness remained too small to reach a full two-pi phase shift.

"We had to start by figuring out what type of design would yield the best performance given the incomplete phase," said co-author Jiajiu Zheng, a doctoral student in electrical and computer engineering.

To make up for the shortfall, the team employed mathematical models that were originally formulated for liquid-crystal optics. These, in conjunction with the metalens structural elements, allowed the researchers to achieve high efficiency even if the whole phase shift is not covered. They tested the metalens' efficacy by using it to capture different test images, including of the Mona Lisa and a block letter W. The team also demonstrated how stretching the metalens could tune the focal length of the lens.

In addition to achieving a wholly new approach to metalens design at record-thin levels, the team believes that its experiments show the promise of making new devices for imaging and optics entirely out of 2D materials.

"These results open up an entirely new platform for studying the properties of 2D materials, as well as constructing fully functional nanophotonic devices made entirely from these materials," said Majumdar. Additionally, these materials can be easily transferred to any substrate, including flexible materials, paving a way towards flexible photonics.

This story is adapted from material from the University of Washington, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.