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Ultrathin broadband reflective optical limiter

Published 5 Jun 2020 in physics.optics and physics.app-ph | (2006.03595v3)

Abstract: Optical limiters are nonlinear devices that feature decreasing transmittance with increasing incident optical intensity, and thus can protect sensitive components from high-intensity illumination. The ideal optical limiter reflects rather than absorbs light in its active ("limiting") state, minimizing risk of damage to the limiter itself. Previous efforts to realize reflective limiters were based on embedding nonlinear layers into relatively thick multilayer photonic structures, resulting in substantial fabrication complexity, reduced speed and, in some instances, limited working bandwidth. We overcome these tradeoffs by using the insulator-to-metal transition in vanadium dioxide (VO2) to achieve intensity-dependent modulation of resonant transmission through aperture antennas. Due to the dramatic change of optical properties across the insulator-to-metal transition, low-quality-factor resonators were sufficient to achieve high on-off ratios in device transmittance. As a result, our ultra-thin reflective limiter (thickness ~1/100 of the free-space wavelength) is broadband in terms of operating wavelength (> 2 um at 10 um) and angle of incidence (up to ~50$\deg$ away from the normal).

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