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Dynamic Excitonic Beam Switching with Atomically‐Thin Binary Blazed Gratings
Author(s) -
Guarneri Ludovica,
Bauer Thomas,
Li Qitong,
Song JungHwan,
Selvin Skyler,
Saunders Ashley P.,
Liu Fang,
Brongersma Mark L.,
van de Groep Jorik
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced optical materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.89
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 2195-1071
DOI - 10.1002/adom.202403257
Abstract Beam steering metasurfaces are ultra‐compact optical coatings that offer on‐demand redirection of optical power to specific diffraction orders. To achieve this, spatial gradients are commonly introduced in the phase of light scattered by plasmon or Mie resonant nanoparticles within the metasurface grating's unit cell. However, these phase gradients are oftentimes difficult to tune post‐fabrication. Recently, excitons in monolayer 2D semiconductors have emerged as a new metasurface building block, due to their strong and electrically‐tunable resonant light‐matter interaction. These 2D excitonic metasurfaces offer the tantalizing prospect of beam switching within a single monolayer. Here, it is demonstrated how the 2D analog of binary blazed gratings enables such beam switching by mere nanopatterning of a large monolayer WS 2 , even though nanoscale ribbons of WS 2 do not support geometrical resonances. By introducing a gradient in the nanoribbon width within the metasurface unit cell, an amplitude gradient combined with a small phase gradient in the scattered fields results in asymmetric diffraction efficiencies. Using a scattered‐field analysis, it is shown that these gradients can be further engineered via interference effects with the substrate reflection. Finally, the electrical tunability of the exciton resonance is leveraged to achieve selective and dynamic beam switching with an atomically‐thin metasurface.