Dianmin Lin
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Dianmin Lin.
Science | 2014
Dianmin Lin; Pengyu Fan; Erez Hasman; Mark L. Brongersma
Extending the range of planar optics To build miniature optical devices, scientists are using silicon to replace bulky three-dimensional devices with flat versions. A patterned surface consisting of dense arrays of nanoscale silicon strips, which act as antennae, can be designed to work as transparent optical devices for the manipulation of light. Lin et al. used their versatile patterning technique to create a suite of planar optical elements. By patterning a 100-nm layer of silicon into a dense arrangement of nano-antennae, they were able to fabricate gratings, lenses, and axicons—a device that can add a shape to a propagating light beam. Science, this issue p. 298 Silicon-based metasurfaces can extend the range of planar optical devices. Gradient metasurfaces are two-dimensional optical elements capable of manipulating light by imparting local, space-variant phase changes on an incident electromagnetic wave. These surfaces have thus far been constructed from nanometallic optical antennas, and high diffraction efficiencies have been limited to operation in reflection mode. We describe the experimental realization and operation of dielectric gradient metasurface optical elements capable of also achieving high efficiencies in transmission mode in the visible spectrum. Ultrathin gratings, lenses, and axicons have been realized by patterning a 100-nanometer-thick Si layer into a dense arrangement of Si nanobeam antennas. The use of semiconductors can broaden the general applicability of gradient metasurfaces, as they offer facile integration with electronics and can be realized by mature semiconductor fabrication technologies.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Dianmin Lin; Mauro Melli; Evgeni Poliakov; Pierre St. Hilaire; Scott Dhuey; Christophe Peroz; Stefano Cabrini; Mark L. Brongersma; Michael Anthony Klug
Metasurfaces have facilitated the replacement of conventional optical elements with ultrathin and planar photonic structures. Previous designs of metasurfaces were limited to small deflection angles and small ranges of the angle of incidence. Here, we have created two types of Si-based metasurfaces to steer visible light to a large deflection angle. These structures exhibit high diffraction efficiencies over a broad range of angles of incidence. We have demonstrated metasurfaces working both in transmission and reflection modes based on conventional thin film silicon processes that are suitable for the large-scale fabrication of high-performance devices.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2018
Soongyu Yi; Ming Zhou; Z. Yu; Pengyu Fan; Nader Behdad; Dianmin Lin; Ken Xingze Wang; Shanhui Fan; Mark L. Brongersma
Sensing the direction of sounds gives animals clear evolutionary advantage. For large animals, with an ear-to-ear spacing that exceeds audible sound wavelengths, directional sensing is simply accomplished by recognizing the intensity and time differences of a wave impinging on its two ears1. Recent research suggests that in smaller, subwavelength animals, angle sensing can instead rely on a coherent coupling of soundwaves between the two ears2–4. Inspired by this natural design, here we show a subwarvelength photodetection pixel that can measure both the intensity and incident angle of light. It relies on an electrical isolation and optical coupling of two closely spaced Si nanowires that support optical Mie resonances5–7. When these resonators scatter light into the same free-space optical modes, a non-Hermitian coupling results that affords highly sensitive angle determination. By straightforward photocurrent measurements, we can independently quantify the stored optical energy in each nanowire and relate the difference in the stored energy between the wires to the incident angle of a light wave. We exploit this effect to fabricate a subwavelength angle-sensitive pixel with angular sensitivity, δθ = 0.32°.Two Si resonators couple through a non-Hermitian interaction to sense both the intensity and the incident angle of light with subwavelength resolution.
Nano Letters | 2016
Dianmin Lin; Aaron L. Holsteen; Elhanan Maguid; Gordon Wetzstein; Pieter G. Kik; Erez Hasman; Mark L. Brongersma
Archive | 2017
Dianmin Lin; Mauro Melli; Pierre St. Hilaire; Christophe Peroz; Evgeni Poliakov
Archive | 2015
Mark L. Brongersma; Dianmin Lin; Pengyu Fan; Erez Hasman
Archive | 2018
Brian T. Schowengerdt; Dianmin Lin; Pierre St. Hilaire
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2017
Soongyu Yi; Ming Zhou; Z. Yu; Pengyu Fan; Dianmin Lin; Shanhui Fan; Mark L. Brongersma
Archive | 2017
Dianmin Lin; Mark L. Brongersma; Pieter G. Kik; Gordon Wetzstein
Archive | 2017
Dianmin Lin; Mark L. Brongersma; Erez Hasman; Pieter G. Kik; Aaron L. Holsteen