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Do bilayer metasurfaces behave as a stack of decoupled single-layer metasurfaces? (2309.14960v2)

Published 26 Sep 2023 in physics.optics and physics.app-ph

Abstract: Flat optics or metasurfaces have opened new frontiers in wavefront shaping and its applications. Polarization optics is one prominent area which has greatly benefited from the shape-birefringence of metasurfaces. However, flat optics comprising a single layer of meta-atoms can only perform a subset of polarization transformations, constrained by a symmetric Jones matrix. This limitation can be tackled using metasurfaces composed of bilayer meta-atoms but exhausting all possible combinations of geometries to build a bilayer metasurface library is a very daunting task. Consequently, bilayer metasurfaces have been widely treated as a cascade (product) of two decoupled single-layer metasurfaces. Here, we test the validity of this assumption by considering a metasurface made of TiO2 on fused silica substrate at a design wavelength of 532 nm. We explore regions in the design space where the coupling between the top and bottom layers can be neglected, i.e., producing a far-field response which approximates that of two decoupled single-layer metasurfaces. We complement this picture with the near-field analysis to explore the underlying physics in regions where both layers are strongly coupled. Our analysis is general and it allows the designer to efficiently build a multi-layer metasurface, either in transmission or reflection, by only running one full-wave simulation for a single-layer metasurface.

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