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ITO-Based Microheaters for Reversible Multi-Stage Switching of Phase-Change Materials: Towards Miniaturized Beyond-Binary Reconfigurable Integrated Photonics

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TLDR
This study showcases the possibility of forming a whole new class of miniaturized reconfigurable integrated nanophotonics using beyond-binary reconfiguration of optical functionalities in hybrid PCM-photonic devices.
Abstract
Inducing a large refractive-index change is the holy grail of reconfigurable photonic structures, a goal that has long been the driving force behind the discovery of new optical material platforms. Recently, the unprecedentedly large refractive-index contrast between the amorphous and crystalline states of Ge-Sb-Te (GST)-based phase-change materials (PCMs) has attracted tremendous attention for reconfigurable integrated nanophotonics. Here, we introduce a microheater platform that employs optically transparent and electrically conductive indium-tin-oxide (ITO) bridges for the fast and reversible electrical switching of the GST phase between crystalline and amorphous states. By the proper assignment of electrical pulses applied to the ITO microheater, we show that our platform allows for the registration of virtually any intermediate crystalline state into the GST film integrated on the top of the designed microheaters. More importantly, we demonstrate the full reversibility of the GST phase between amorphous and crystalline states. To show the feasibility of using this hybrid GST/ITO platform for miniaturized integrated nanophotonic structures, we integrate our designed microheaters into the arms of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer to realize electrically reconfigurable optical phase shifters with orders of magnitude smaller footprints compared to existing integrated photonic architectures. We show that the phase of optical signals can be gradually shifted in multiple intermediate states using a structure that can potentially be smaller than a single wavelength. We believe that our study showcases the possibility of forming a whole new class of miniaturized reconfigurable integrated nanophotonics using beyond-binary reconfiguration of optical functionalities in hybrid PCM-photonic devices.

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Posted Content

Reconfigurable all-dielectric metalens with diffraction limited performance

TL;DR: In this article, an active metasurface platform combining phase tuning covering the full 2ππ$ range and diffraction-limited performance using an all-dielectric, low-loss architecture based on optical phase change materials (O-PCMs) is introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Hybrid Metasurfaces.

TL;DR: A reconfigurable hybrid metasurface platform is presented by incorporating the phase-change material Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) into metal-dielectric meta-atoms for active and nonvolatile tuning of properties of light.
Posted Content

Multi-level Electro-thermal Switching of Optical Phase-Change Materials Using Graphene

TL;DR: In this article, an optoelectronic framework for nonvolatile tunable photonics that employs undoped-graphene microheaters to thermally and reversibly switch the optical phase change material Ge$_2$Sb$N$_4$Te$_1$ (GSST) was demonstrated using an in-situ Raman spectroscopy method.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Graphene based materials: Past, present and future

TL;DR: Graphene and its derivatives are being studied in nearly every field of science and engineering as mentioned in this paper, and recent progress has shown that the graphene-based materials can have a profound impact on electronic and optoelectronic devices, chemical sensors, nanocomposites and energy storage.
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Phase-change materials for rewriteable data storage

TL;DR: This review looks at the unique property combination that characterizes phase-change materials, in particular the contrast between the amorphous and crystalline states, and the origin of the fast crystallization kinetics.
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Optically reconfigurable metasurfaces and photonic devices based on phase change materials

TL;DR: In this article, a novel approach for making reconfigurable optical components that are created with light in a non-volatile and reversible fashion is reported, where components are written, erased and rewritten as two-dimensional binary or greyscale patterns into a nanoscale film of phase-change material by inducing a refractive index-changing phase transition with tailored trains of femtosecond pulses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resonant bonding in crystalline phase-change materials

TL;DR: Measurements of the dielectric function in the energy range from 0.025 to 3 eV reveal that the optical dielectrics constant is 70-200% larger for the crystalline than the amorphous phases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phase-change materials for non-volatile photonic applications

TL;DR: Materials whose optical properties can be reconfigured are crucial for photonic applications such as optical memories and phase-change materials offer such utility and recent progress is reviewed.
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