Optical metasurfaces are planar subwavelength nanoantenna arrays engineered to provide on-demand manipulation of light, thereby enabling ultra-compact flat optics with high performance, small form-factor and new functionalities. When integrated with active elements, the pixelated, thin device architecture further facilitates dynamic tuning of local and global optical responses. Leveraging advanced materials, designs and architectures, we develop novel active and passive meta-optics capable of transforming a variety of optical systems that are traditionally bulky and complicated.
Chalcogenide phase change materials (PCMs) are a unique class of compounds whose switchable optical and electronic properties have fueled an explosion of emerging applications in microelectronics and microphotonics. The key to any application is the ability of PCMs to reliably switch between crystalline and amorphous states over a large number of cycles. While this issue has been extensively studied in the case of microelectronic memories, current PCM-based optical devices suffer from much inferior endurance. To understand the failure mechanisms limiting endurance of PCMs specifically in microphotonic devices, we have developed an on-chip resistive micro-heater platform and an automatic multi-modal characterization system to analyze cycling performance of optical PCMs. Reversible switching of large-area PCM devices over 50,000 cycles was demonstrated.
Phase change materials or PCMs are truly remarkable compounds whose unique switchable properties have fueled an explosion of emerging applications in electronics and photonics. Nonetheless, if we discount their use in optical discs, PCMs’ immense application potential in photonics beyond data recording has only begun to unfold in the past decade. While the material requirements for optical or electronic data storage have been succinctly summarized as five key elements “writability, archival storage, erasability, readability, and cyclability” decades ago, these requirements are not universally relevant to the diverse set of photonic applications now being explored. It also comes as no surprise that existing PCMs, which have been heavily vetted for data storage, are not necessarily the optimal compositions for different use cases in optics and photonics. PCMs with their attributes custom-tailored for specific applications are therefore in demand as phase-change photonics continue to expand. Here we discuss the PCM selection and design strategies specifically for photonic applications as well as our recent work developing active integrated photonic devices and meta-surface optics based on new PCMs tailored for photonics.
Chalcogenide phase change materials (PCMs) are a class of alloys exhibiting gigantic optical property contrast upon structural transition from an amorphous to a crystalline state. The structural transition is also nonvolatile and does not require constant power supply to maintain its optical state. These unique behaviors qualify PCMs as a novel functional material enabling various on-chip and free-space re-programmable optical computing network architectures. Here we present monolithic integration of PCMs with integrated photonics and metasurface optics leveraging standard silicon foundry facilities, and the demonstration of electrically programmable photonic devices for on-chip optical routing, memory, and computing functions
Optical phase change materials (PCMs) are a unique class of materials which exhibit extraordinarily large optical property change (e.g. refractive index change > 1) when undergoing a solid-state phase transition, and they have witnessed increasing adoption in active integrated photonics and metasurface devices in recent years. Here we report integration of chalcogenide phase change materials in the Lincoln Laboratory 8-inch Si foundry process and the demonstration of electrothermally switched phase-change photonic devices building on a wafer-scale silicon-on-insulator heater platform.
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