English

Large-scale parameterized metasurface design using adjoint optimization

Optics 2021-01-19 v1

Abstract

Optical metasurfaces are planar arrangements of subwavelength meta-atoms that implement a wide range of transformations on incident light. The design of efficient metasurfaces requires that the responses of and interactions among meta-atoms are accurately modeled. Conventionally, each meta-atom's response is approximated by that of a meta-atom located in a periodic array. Although this approximation is accurate for metastructures with slowly varying meta-atoms, it does not accurately model the complex interactions among meta-atoms in more rapidly varying metasurfaces. Optimization-based design techniques that rely on full-wave simulations mitigate this problem but thus far have been mostly applied to topology optimization of small metasurfaces. Here, we describe an adjoint-optimization-based design technique that uses parameterized meta-atoms. Our technique has a lower computational cost than topology optimization approaches, enabling the design of large-scale metasurfaces that can be readily fabricated. As proof of concept, we present the design and experimental demonstration of high numerical aperture metalenses with significantly higher efficiencies than their conventionally-designed counterparts.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2101.06292,
  title  = {Large-scale parameterized metasurface design using adjoint optimization},
  author = {Mahdad Mansouree and Andrew McClung and Sarath Samudrala and Amir Arbabi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2101.06292},
  year   = {2021}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T22:13:01.471Z