Strong Modulation of Absorption and Third-Harmonic Generation in
Resonant Metasurfaces based on VO
2
Margherita Marni and Domenico de Ceglia
Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova, Italy
Keywords: Metasurfaces, Nonlinear Optics, Harmonic Generation, Nanoantennas, Tunable Devices, Nanophotonics,
Phase-change Materials.
Abstract: Control of linear and nonlinear optical signals is of key importance in a variety of applications, including
signal processing, optical computing and energy harvesting, to name just a few. Optical modulation and
switching, and more generally tunability in photonic devices, are usually achieved in the visible and near-
infrared range by carrier injection, chemical or mechanical activation, or by deploying materials with large
electro-optic or optical nonlinear coefficients. However, these mechanisms are inherently weak and therefore
require intense control signals in order to produce significant modulation effects. Here we adopt a
nanophotonic solution in which a resonant film of a volatile phase-change material, vanadium dioxide, is
inserted between an array of antennas and a metallic backplane. Our design takes advantage of (i) the large
refractive-index change of VO
2
at its insulator-to-metal transition and (ii) the field enhancements available
when the Fabry-Pérot resonance of the film and the plasmonic resonance of the antennas are exited. In
response to the VO
2
phase transition, not only does our metasurface provide a strong and broadband
modulation of linear absorption and reflection but it also shows a drastic variation of third-harmonic
generation, with a conversion-efficiency contrast higher than three orders of magnitude.
1 INTRODUCTION
Metasurfaces and their constituent metamolecules,
i.e., nanoantennas, are able to control light-matter
interactions at the nanoscale (Yu et al., 2011).
Amplitude, phase and polarization of light can be
manipulated at will by properly designing these
nanostructures. Dynamic control of metasurfaces’
functionalities holds the promise to unlock a wide
variety of new opportunities for highly compact
photonic devices, capable of modulating, beaming
and switching light. Here we discuss the modulation
properties of a plasmonic metasurface that
incorporates vanadium dioxide. This phase-change
material is particularly attracting for the design of
low-power tunable devices because it exhibits an
abrupt and reversible change of its complex refractive
index at the relatively low temperature of 68 °C. So
far, a number of designs of VO
2
-based metasurfaces
has been investigated. The design strategies to
achieve tunability at optical frequencies are based on
the use of either planar structures (Kats et al., 2013;
Kats et al., 2012; Kocer et al., 2015), in which one of
the films is made of VO
2
, or patterned nanostructures
(i.e., metasurfaces), typically designed with hybrid
VO
2
-metal resonators – see, for example (Zhu et al.,
2017). The metasurface proposed here is configured
as a perfect absorber, known as Salisbury screen at
microwave frequency, with a thin film of VO
2
sandwiched between a two-dimensional array of
plasmonic antennas and a metallic substrate that acts
as a mirror. In this configuration, the metasurface
provides two types of resonances: Fabry-Pérot (FP)
resonances with field localization in the VO
2
film;
antenna resonances (AR), with the field highly
confined around the plasmonic antennas. Thanks to
the coupling of these two resonances, high absorption
is achieved in a broad band of near-infrared
wavelengths, when VO
2
is in its insulating phase. On
the other hand, when VO
2
switches to the metallic
phase, for temperatures larger than 68 °C , the
metasurface tends to reflect light more efficiently,
and therefore absorption drops significantly.
In addition, we have investigated the modulation
of third-harmonic generation (THG) due to the cubic
nonlinearity of VO
2
. If the pump signal at the
fundamental wavelength is tuned at the AR of the
metasurface, a large contrast of third-harmonic
40
Marni, M. and de Ceglia, D.
Strong Modulation of Absorption and Third-Harmonic Generation in Resonant Metasurfaces based on VO2.
DOI: 10.5220/0010340000400045
In Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology (PHOTOPTICS 2021), pages 40-45
ISBN: 978-989-758-492-3
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
conversion efficiency is obtained in response to the
VO
2
insulator-to-metal transition.
2 DESCRIPTION OF THE
METASURFACE
The tunable absorber metasurface, reported in Figure
1, is composed of a substrate made of gold, a thin-
film layer of VO
2
and an array of gold antennas with
a cross shape. The design has been made so that the
structure is insensitive to the input polarization, with
each antenna resonating near 𝜆1.55 μm. The
antenna has a square cross-section with size
30x30 nm and the length of the cross arms is
145 nm. The antenna length has been designed by
maximizing, at 1.55 μm, the average field-
enhancement calculated in the rods volume. The
period of the unit cell is 300 nm in both the 𝑥 and 𝑦
directions, so that the metasurface shows only zero-th
order reflection at normal incidence, at both the pump
and the third-harmonic (TH) wavelengths.
Figure 1: Schematics of the tunable metasurface under
investigation. The structure is illuminated at normal
incidence with a near-infrared source (red arrow). The TH
signal is radiated back towards the source (blue arrow).
The simulations have been performed using
COMSOL, both in the linear and nonlinear regime.
Gold has been modelled with the Lorentz-Drude
dispersion of (Rakić et al., 1998). For VO
2
in the
insulator phase (𝑇68 °C) and metallic phase (𝑇
68 °C), we have used the datasets made available in
(Wan et al., 2019). The metasurface is illuminated
with a plane wave at normal incidence, linearly-
polarized along the y-direction. Linear and
nonlinear spectra are calculated by using the layer
thickness of VO
2
, 𝑡

, as a free parameter that
varies between 40 nm and 140 nm . In our
structure, the VO
2
film acts as spacer between the
antenna array and the backplane mirror, as in the
Salisbury screen absorber configuration.
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
3.1 Linear Response and Modulation of
Absorption
The metasurface supports two types of resonances,
namely, FP resonances and AR. The AR has been
designed at 1.55 μm in absence of the VO
2
film and
the gold backplane, and assuming a glass substrate
(index 1.5). It is reasonable to expect an absorption
peak near this wavelength, with strong field
localization around the antennas. In addition, since
there is a gold slab under the VO
2
layer, according to
the image theorem, we can expect that our structure
shows absorption peaks when the FP resonances of
the film are excited, specifically when 𝜆

4𝑛

𝑡

/𝑚, where 𝑚1,2, is the FP resonance
order and 𝑛

is the VO
2
refractive index. At
wavelengths near the AR and FP resonances, the
metasurface behaves as a strong absorber. In Figure
2, we show the absorption spectrum in the linear
regime for a VO
2
thickness equal to 80 nm.
Figure 2: Calculated absorption spectrum as function of
wavelength in insulator (blue line) and metal (red line) state
of VO
2
when the VO
2
thickness is 80𝑛𝑚.
One can note the broadband enhanced absorption
effect associated with the excitation of the FP
resonance and the AR. Furthermore, there is a strong
difference between the spectra in the insulator and
metal states of VO
2
. In particular, in a broadband
region, from 1 to 2 μm, the structure switches from a
high absorption state, with maximum peaks close to
100%, to a low absorption state, with an average
Strong Modulation of Absorption and Third-Harmonic Generation in Resonant Metasurfaces based on VO2
41
absorption of approximately 40% in the same
wavelength range. The interesting and
counterintuitive aspect to observe is that the structure
is very absorptive when the VO
2
is in the insulator
phase, while it becomes a more efficient reflector
when VO
2
switches to the metallic state.
Figure 3: Absorption color map of the tunable absorber
metasurface as a function of wavelength and VO
2
thickness.
In (a) VO
2
is in its insulator state, in (b) VO
2
is in its metal
state. In (a) the dashed lines follow the FP and AR
resonances according to model in Eq. (1).
For VO
2
is in its insulator state, there are two
absorption peaks, at 𝜆

1.13 μm and at 𝜆

1.67 μm, corresponding to the FP resonance and to
the AR, respectively. It is interesting to notice that the
AR appears at a longer wavelength with respect to the
designed wavelength of 1.55 μm. In fact, the system
is made by two coupled resonators (FP and AR), and
the two resonances tend to split and repel each other
when coupling is stronger, leading to the typical
anticrossing effect of coupled oscillators. In order to
highlight this behavior, we have calculated the
absorption spectra for different values of VO
2
thickness. The results of this analysis are presented in
Figure 3. When VO
2
is in the insulator state, the
metasurface response can be modelled as a two
coupled oscillator system, with resonance frequencies
given by (Novotny, 2010):
𝜔
,

1
2
𝜔
𝜔
𝜔
𝜔
4Γ
𝜔
𝜔
(1)
where 𝜔
and 𝜔
are the FP and AR resonance
frequencies in absence of mutual coupling,
respectively, whereas Γ is the anticrossing frequency
splitting. Here 𝜔
2𝜋𝑐/𝜆

is the frequency of the
first-order FP resonance and 𝜔
2𝜋𝑐/1.55𝜇𝑚 is
the frequency of the uncoupled AR (Γ0). A good
agreement with the numerically-calculated
absorption peaks is obtained when the mutual
coupling is Γ0.26 𝜔
, as depicted in Figure 3(a),
in which the dashed curves are retrieved by using Eq.
(1). The anticrossing due to coupling produced a
broadband absorption for wavelength from 1 to 2 μm
and for a broad range of 𝑡

values. The AR weakly
depends on 𝑡

, and it is strongly blue-shifted when
VO
2
undergoes the phase transition. The AR is
completely quenched when the VO
2
film becomes
metallic – see Figure 3(b).
Figure 4: Reflection contrast R

/R

, on a dB color
scale, for varying 𝜆 and 𝑡

. The dashed lines follow the
FP and AR resonances according to model in Eq. (1).
A better idea of the tunability performances is
provided by the modulation depth of reflectance,
which is a metrics that can be retrieved
experimentally. When VO
2
changes phase from
insulator to metallic, the metasurface switches from a
virtually perfect absorber [see Figure 2 and Figure
3(a)] to a good mirror [see Figure 3(b)]. The
reflectance contrast, defined as R

/R

, where
R
/
is the reflectance for VO
2
in the
PHOTOPTICS 2021 - 9th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology
42
insulator/metal state, is mapped in Figure 4 for
varying wavelength and VO
2
film thickness. Thanks
to the anticrossing of the AR and FP resonance an
average ~15 dB contrast is obtained in a large
bandwidth in the near infrared, with a peak of 20 dB
at 𝜆~1.6 μm with a thickness of VO
2
of 85 nm.
Figure 5: Field enhancement spatial calculated as the ratio
between local electric field and incident one E
0
, when VO
2
is in insulator state with a VO
2
film thickness equal to
80nm. (a) FE calculated at the AR wavelength. (b) same as
(a) at the FP resonance wavelength.
Another important aspect of the problem is the
behavior of the field enhancement (FE), calculated as
the ratio between the amplitude of the local electric
field and the amplitude of the incident electric field.
Figure 4 compares the FE spatial distribution when
the structure is under FP and AR resonance
conditions. It is clear that the FE at the AR
wavelength is higher than that calculated at the FP
resonance. Figure 5(a) indicates that the localization
and the electric-field mainly concerns the area around
the antenna. On the other hand, Figure 5(b) shows that
the FE is distributed throughout the volume of the
VO
2
when the FP is excited. When the VO
2
passes in
its metal state, the FE decreases by ~90% for the AR
and by ~70% for the FP resonance.
3.2 Nonlinear Response and
Modulation of Third Harmonic
Generation
We now focus on the nonlinear response of the
metasurface that originates from the cubic
nonlinearity of VO
2
. We assume an isotropic 𝝌
𝟑
tensor so that the induced nonlinear polarization at the
TH wavelength is:
𝑃
3𝜔
𝜖
𝜒
𝐸
𝜔
𝐸
𝜔
𝐸
𝜔
𝐸
𝜔,
(2)
where 𝑖,𝑗,𝑘 are the Cartesian coordinates, 𝜖
the
vacuum permittivity and 𝜒
the third-order
nonlinear susceptibility of VO
2
. Here we assume that
𝜒
10

m
/V
when VO
2
is in the insulator
state and 𝜒
3.1610

m
/V
when VO
2
is in
the metal state. The increase of 𝜒
that accompanies
the insulator-to-metal transition has been
experimentally observed in (Petrov, Yakovlev, &
Squier, 2002), where third-harmonic generation from
a VO
2
film measured as a function of pump irradiance
and temperature. In our nonlinear simulations, the
structure is pumped at normal incidence with a y-
Figure 6: Color map of THG conversion efficiency as a
function of pump wavelength and VO
2
thickness. (a) VO
2
is in insulator state, and (b) VO
2
is in metal state.
Strong Modulation of Absorption and Third-Harmonic Generation in Resonant Metasurfaces based on VO2
43
polarized plane wave with intensity I_0=1 GW/cm^2
and wavelength in the near-infrared, in the
wavelength range where the FP and AR resonances
occur. The conversion efficiency of TH generation is
calculated as η_THG=P^3ω/P^ω, where P^3ω is the
power of the reflected TH signal and P^ω is the
incident power. In Figure 6, η_THG is mapped as a
function of pump wavelength and VO2 film
thickness.
With VO
2
in the insulator phase, a maximum peak
of THG is observed when the pump wavelength is
tuned at the AR, while no feature is associated with
the FP resonance [Figure 6(a)]. Even though the 𝜒
increases when VO
2
switches in the metallic state,
THG efficiency drops significantly near the AR
wavelength and only a shallow peak appears near the
FP resonance [Figure 6(b)]. These results are in
agreement with the Fermi’s golden rule, which
predicts that the THG conversion efficiency scales as
(Vincenti et al., 2014):
𝜂

∝
𝜒
FE
.
(3)
In response to the VO
2
transition, on one hand 𝜒
increases by a factor ~3, on the other hand the FE
drops by 90% on the AR resonance and 70% on the
FP. As a result of this FE drop, the conversion
efficiency is significantly inhibited in the VO
2
metallic state. A better picture of this effect can be
observed in Figure 7, where cross sections of the
color maps of Figure 6 are plotted for 𝑡

80 nm.
When the pump is tuned on the AR wavelength, the
drop of reflected THG is of about three orders of
magnitude (30 dB), due to the high sensitivity of THG
to the FE.
Figure 7: Color map of THG conversion efficiency as a
function of pump wavelength and VO
2
thickness. (a) VO
2
is in insulator state, and (b) VO
2
is in metal state.
4 CONCLUSIONS
We have studied a tunable metasurface that exploits
the insulator-to-metal transition of VO
2
. The structure
has been designed as a tunable absorber/mirror in the
Salisbury configuration, with the VO
2
film acting as
a tunable spacer between a metallic backplane and an
array of metallic antennas. Our results indicate that a
deep modulation of linear spectra absorption and
reflection – are obtained if the structure is judiciously
designed so that Fabry-Pérot and antenna resonances
are mutually coupled. A reflectance contrast of ~15
dB is found in a broad bandwidth in the near-infrared
range. An even stronger modulation effect is
predicted for the reflected third-harmonic generation.
The conversion efficiency of this nonlinear process
drops by ~30 dB when the metasurface is pumped
near the antenna resonance.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors acknowledge the project “Internet of
Things: Sviluppi Metodologici, Tecnologici E
Applicativi”, cofunded (2018–2022) by the Italian
Ministry of Education, Universities and Research
(MIUR) under the aegis of the “Fondo per il
finanziamento dei dipartimenti universitari di
eccellenza” initiative (Law 232/2016). The work was
partially sponsored by the RDECOM-Atlantic, US
Army Research Office, and Office of Naval Research
Global.
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