† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the National Basic Research Program of China (Grant No. 2012CB921803), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants Nos. 61225026, 61490714, 11304151, and 61435008), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province, China (Grant Nos. BK20150845 and 15KJB140004), the Open Foundation Project of National Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures, China (Grant No. M28003), and the Research Center of Optical Communications Engineering & Technology, Jiangsu Province, China.
Metamaterial-based absorbers play a significant role in applications ranging from energy harvesting and thermal emitters to sensors and imaging devices. The middle dielectric layer of conventional metamaterial absorbers has always been solid. Researchers could not detect the near field distribution in this layer or utilize it effectively. Here, we use anisotropic liquid crystal as the dielectric layer to realize electrically fast tunable terahertz metamaterial absorbers. We demonstrate strong, position-dependent terahertz near-field enhancement with sub-wavelength resolution inside the metamaterial absorber. We measure the terahertz far-field absorption as the driving voltage increases. By combining experimental results with liquid crystal simulations, we verify the near-field distribution in the middle layer indirectly and bridge the near-field and far-field observations. Our work opens new opportunities for creating high-performance, fast, tunable, terahertz metamaterial devices that can be applied in biological imaging and sensing.
Terahertz (THz) radiation (0.1–10 THz) has a wide range of potential applications such as security and defense, bio-medical, biopsy, and non-destructive detection because of its low photon energy, sensitivity to hydrogen-bond absorption, and the ease with which it can penetrate non-conducting materials.[1,2] THz absorbers that can be used for THz sensing, imaging, and cloaking are in high demand.[3,4] Because of the lack of efficient natural materials in the THz range, metamaterial perfect absorbers (MPAs), which have the advantages of small size and minimal thickness, have received substantial attention.[5,6] Because of the limitations imposed by the 3-layer geometry (metasurface, dielectric spacer, metal ground plane) and the manufacturing processes, the previous researchers, who wanted to optimize device performance for mechanical flexibility along with broadband, multiband, polarization-insensitive, angular-insensitive absorption, have devoted most of their attention to the design of different metasurfaces and have relied on only a few solid spacers such as polyimide, GaAs, and SiO2.[7–11]
We should note that the middle dielectric layer of MPAs plays an important role, especially in the THz regime where the dielectric absorption losses are much larger than the Ohmic losses.[12,13] Some prior researchers have already focused on the middle layer, where strong THz near-field enhancement with sub-wavelength resolution is very useful for detectors.[14,15] But these enhancements are not observed when we use any currently developed theory, such as the effective medium, interference, and transmission line model theories.[16–18] THz near-field microscopy cannot detect the inner field distribution exactly. An association between the strong THz near-field characteristics and the absorption performance in the far field has not yet been clearly explained. Hence, it is very significant and challenging to investigate the inside of MPAs, especially when we use a non-solid anisotropic material as the middle spacer.
Liquid crystal (LC) is a promising candidate that possesses many properties of a liquid while exhibiting anisotropy similar to that of a crystal. The director is sensitive to the surface and the external electric field. The mature LC-based display technology makes the LC solution very attractive in both academia and industry for possible low-cost mass production.[19] Currently, LC-based THz tunable components have been widely proposed. Unfortunately, the very slow response time caused by the thick LC layer hampers their further development in practical applications.[20–22] The use of metamaterial can compress the thickness while working as an electrode to control the LC by means of an applied voltage. However, in the prior research, unaligned LC was simply deposited on top of THz MPA to realize tunability,[23,24] which was not manipulated efficiently. There have also been some recent theoretical studies.[25,26]
Here, we propose a new kind of THz metamaterial absorber (TMA), which mainly consists of four layers, produced by a simple and mature LC cell fabrication process. LC material NJU-LDn-4 with large birefringence in the THz range[27] is used as the middle dielectric spacer. Thanks to the structure of the THz MPA, the thickness of the LC layer is much less than a wavelength; thus we achieve a fast, tunable TMA. Furthermore, in combination with LC simulations, we experimentally verify the strong near-field enhancement distribution inside the MPA indirectly and bridge the position-dependence of near-field and far-field tunable absorption observations.
The configuration of the component is illustrated in Fig.
The working principle here is the same as that of an ordinary MPA. The metasurface strongly couples to the incident THz electric field, and pairing the metasurface with a metal ground plane creates a mechanism for coupling to the magnetic component of the THz wave. Both the metal itself and the dielectric loss of the middle layer dissipate the incident energy. Zero transmission is ensured by the metal ground plane regardless of the thickness of the top substrate. By simply altering the applied voltage, we can tune the refractive index of the middle LC layer, allowing for both impedance matching and strong absorption at the resonant frequency. It is assumed that the thickness of the aligning layer SD1 is at the nanoscale, which is not taken into account, so is the effect caused by the bottom substrate. As reported by Chen et al., the response time of the tunable TMA in their study could not be measured because of the limitations of the THz-TDS system.[30] However, our LC thickness is just 15 μm, comparable to that used in the LC display (LCD) field in which the response time of LCs is nearly proportional to the square of the cell gap.[31] Consequently, our device has the same millisecond scale response time as a typical LCD. The employment of LC NJU-LDn-4 with a large birefringence also greatly reduces the cell gap and the response time. Therefore, this TMA is a faster tunable THz LC device compared to the traditional LC-based THz devices with a large cell gap.
We use the COMSOL software to simulate the tunable range of the far field resonant characteristic and the near field enhancement inside TMA. The simulations are performed by a frequency domain solver with periodic boundary conditions. The Au is modeled as a Drude metal with a plasma frequency of 2π × 2181 THz and a collision frequency of 2π × 6.5 THz. The LC is an anisotropic material with no = 1.5 + j0.05 and ne = 1.8 + j0.03. We choose two cases to simulate. One case is for the initial LC director (the optical axis) parallel to the x axis, i.e., the unbiased state (0 V), with nx = ne, ny = no, nz = no; the other is the extreme situation where all the LC directors are in a vertical orientation with nx = no, ny = no, nz = ne. The linearly polarized THz wave is normally incident into the TMA with the electric field E0 in the x direction. Figure
Figure
The THz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS) (TAS7400SP, Advantest Corporation, Japan) in the reflection mode is used to characterize the response of the THz tunable absorber. The system covers the THz spectrum from 0.1 THz to 4 THz and exhibits high spectral power stability in the range of 0.5–2.5 THz with 1.9 GHz resolution. The THz wave arrives at near-normal-incidence to the metasurface of the TMA though the bottom substrates with the electric field parallel to the metal connecting wires. As we increase the applied voltage from 1 Vrms to 7 Vrms in the low voltage range, as shown in Fig.
We use a 3D module of the commercial software Techwiz LCD to simulate the director distribution in the cell. Just as in the experiment, the top electrode is a disk-wire metasurface while the bottom one is a metal ground plane. Pre-alignment is parallel to the x axis in the x–y plane and the cell gap is 15 μm. A 1 kHz square-wave alternating current signal is used. The dielectric anisotropy and viscosity of the LC mixture are as follows: ε‖ = 9.12, ε− = 3.11, Δε = 6.01; γ = 65 mm2·s−1. In the low voltage range (1–7 Vrms), as shown in Figs.
The general trend is that the LC material at different locations inside the TMA makes different contributions to the resonant characteristics of the device. Re-orientation of the LC director is induced by the static electric field. The amplitude, but not the center frequency, of the resonant peak changes clearly with the applied voltage where the intensity of the THz wave is low. Thus the imaginary part of the refractive index of the anisotropic LC has a major influence. When LC reorientation (Figs.
In this work, we have developed a fast tunable TMA with millisecond response time by making use of the unique structure and the high birefringence of the LC at THz frequencies. This device provides an all-electronic means of both frequency and amplitude modulations of the absorption resonance. Position-dependence of the field enhancement with sub-wavelength resolution inside the TMA has been verified by the evolution of the LC director and far field absorption properties driven by voltage. Future work would involve various metamaterials to control the near-field distribution and to realize, not only fast but also widely tunable THz photonic devices for amplitude, phase, and polarization modulations as well as complex wavefront control.[32,33] LC is just a type of organic material with self-assembly. This “live” TMA can be considered as a model or platform for enhanced THz-matter interaction for anisotropic refractive index sensing of microscale samples.[34,35] It provides an alternative method to solve the challenges of weak THz intensity and poor detection resolution, which will play important roles in THz biological imaging and sensing applications.
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