Yonghwi Kim Thesis Defense Time: Jun 18, 2021 09:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://caltech.zoom.us/j/89498024248
Light Modulation with Vanadium Dioxide-Based Optical Devices This thesis focuses on active material-based tunable optical devices. In particular, I have been working on tunable optical devices based on vanadium dioxide (VO2), which can produce tunable optical responses, such as amplitude, phase, thermal emission, and quantum emission. The modulations of light are achieved by coupling the phase-transition material with the precisely designed resonant structures or by placing it close to quantum emitters. This thesis presents three research streams, which aim at experimentally demonstrating the dynamically tunable optical responses using VO2. First, we propose and experimentally demonstrate an electrically tunable VO2-based reflectarray metasurface that exhibits largely tunable optical responses in the near-infrared region. We incorporate VO2 directly into the plasmonic resonator, which undergoes a phase transition triggered by Joule heating. The induced plasmonic resonance modulation is accompanied by a large and continuous modulation in optical responses, such as amplitude and phase. Second, we propose and demonstrate an active tuning of thermal emission from VO2-based metasurfaces. We introduce a thin VO2 film as an absorbing layer on top of a metal reflector. This layer is coupled with a dielectric resonator, with a dielectric spacer placed between them. Upon undergoing a phase transition triggered by heating, the induced absorption tuning of the VO2 layer is accompanied by modulation in the absorption spectra of the coupled structure. We experimentally show narrowband absorption spectra, which can be tuned by controlling the VO2 temperature. Finally, we experimentally demonstrate the axial position of quantum emitters in a multilayered hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) flake with nanoscale accuracy, which is enabled through the modification of a photonic density of states by introducing VO2. Furthermore, we observe a sharp distance-dependent photoluminescence response by modulating the optical environment of an emitter placed close to the hBN/VO2 interface.
