Giant Enhancement of Four-Wave Mixing by Doubly Zone-Folded Nonlocal Metasurfaces
Stephanie C. Malek, Tenzin Norden, Chloe F. Doiron, Tomás Santiago‐Cruz, Jaeyeon Yu, Alexander Cerjan, Prashant Padmanabhan, Igal Brener
Abstract
Resonant optical metasurfaces hold promise for enhancing nonlinear optical signals and manipulating their fundamental properties. However, they rarely excel at amplifying signals from nonlinear processes with two incident pump beams, such as four-wave mixing (FWM) or sum-frequency generation. Frequency-mixing experiments impose challenging requirements for metasurface design due to the need to support multiple optical resonances with compatible field profiles at specified resonant wavelengths, often across a substantial spectral separation. In this work, we introduce nonlocal 'quadromer' metasurfaces containing four nanostructures per unit cell as the key to unlocking configurable, multiresonant metasurfaces that enhance frequency-mixing processes. As a proof of concept, we experimentally demonstrate enhanced FWM using quadromer metasurfaces made of silicon and silicon-rich silicon nitride. The results are relevant for applications such as imaging of infrared light upconverted into the visible spectrum and the generation of quantum light via spontaneous FWM.