Optical Brewster metasurfaces exhibiting ultra-broadband reflectionless absorption and extreme angular-asymmetry
Abstract
Impedance mismatch between free space and absorptive materials is a fundamental issue plaguing the pursue of high-efficiency light absorption. In this work, we design and numerically demonstrate a type of non-resonant impedance-matched optical metasurfaces exhibiting ultra-broadband reflectionless absorption based on anomalous Brewster effect, which are donated as optical Brewster metasurfaces here. Interestingly, such Brewster metasurfaces exhibit a unique type of extreme angular-asymmetry: a transition between perfect transparency and perfect absorption appears when the sign of the incident angle is changed. Such a remarkable phenomenon originates in the coexistence of traditional and anomalous Brewster effects. Guidelines of material selection based on an effective-medium description and strategies such as the integration of a metal back-reflector or folded metasurfaces are proposed to improve the absorption performance. Finally, a gradient optical Brewster metasurface exhibiting ultra-broadband and near-omnidirectional reflectionless absorption is demonstrated. Such high-efficiency asymmetric optical metasurfaces may find applications in optoelectrical and thermal devices like photodetectors, thermal emitters and photovoltaics.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.