Tunable Metasurface Inverse Design for 80% Switching Efficiencies and 144° Angular Deflection
Hsiao L. Chung, Owen D. Miller
Abstract
Tunable metasurfaces have demonstrated the potential for dramatically enhanced functionality for applications including sensing, ranging and imaging. Liquid crystals (LCs) have fast switching speeds, low cost, and mature technological development, offering a versatile platform for electrical tunability. However, to date, electrically tunable metasurfaces are typically designed at a single operational state using physical intuition, without controlling alternate states and thus leading to limited switching efficiencies (<30%) and small angular deflection (<25°). Here, we use large-scale computational “inverse design” to discover high-performance designs through adjoint-based local-optimization design iterations within a global-optimization search. We study and explain the physics of these devices, which heavily rely on sophisticated resonator design to fully utilize the very small permittivity change incurred by switching the liquid-crystal voltage. The optimal devices show tunable deflection angles ranging from 12° to 144° and switching efficiencies above 80%, exhibiting 6× angular improvements and 6× efficiency improvements compared to the current state-of-the-art.