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Dive into the research topics where Quanlong Yang is active.

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Featured researches published by Quanlong Yang.


Optics Express | 2014

Efficient flat metasurface lens for terahertz imaging

Quanlong Yang; Jianqiang Gu; Dongyang Wang; Xueqian Zhang; Zhen Tian; Chunmei Ouyang; Ranjan Singh; Jiaguang Han

Metamaterials offer exciting opportunities that enable precise control of amplitude, polarization and phase of the light beam at a subwavelength scale. A gradient metasurface consists of a class of anisotropic subwavelength metamaterial resonators that offer abrupt amplitude and phase changes, thus enabling new applications in optical device design such as ultrathin flat lenses. We propose a highly efficient gradient metasurface lens based on a metal-dielectric-metal structure that operates in the terahertz regime. The proposed structure consists of slotted metallic resonator arrays on two sides of a thin dielectric spacer. By varying the geometrical parameters, the metasurface lens efficiently manipulates the spatial distribution of the terahertz field and focuses the beam to a spot size on the order of a wavelength. The proposed flat metasurface lens design is polarization insensitive and works efficiently even at wide angles of incidence.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Near-field surface plasmons on quasicrystal metasurfaces

Quanlong Yang; Xueqian Zhang; Shaoxian Li; Quan Xu; Ranjan Singh; Yongmin Liu; Yanfeng Li; Sergey Kruk; Jianqiang Gu; Jiaguang Han

Excitation and manipulation of surface plasmons (SPs) are essential in developing cutting-edge plasmonic devices for medical diagnostics, biochemical spectroscopy and communications. The most common approach involves designing an array of periodic slits or grating apertures that enables coupling of the incident light to the SP modes. In recent years, plasmonic resonances, including extraordinary optical transmission through periodic arrays, quasicrystals and random aperture arrays, have been investigated in the free space. However, most of the studies have been limited to the far field detection of the transmission resonance. Here, we perform near-field measurements of the SPs on quasicrystal metasurfaces. We discover that the reciprocal vector determines the propagation modes of the SPs in the quasicrystal lattice which can be well explained by the quasi-momentum conservation rule. Our findings demonstrate vast potential in developing plasmonic metasurfaces with unique device functionalities that are controlled by the propagation modes of the SPs in quasicrystals.Excitation and manipulation of surface plasmons (SPs) are essential in developing cutting-edge plasmonic devices for medical diagnostics, biochemical spectroscopy and communications. The most common approach involves designing an array of periodic slits or grating apertures that enables coupling of the incident light to the SP modes. In recent years, plasmonic resonances, including extraordinary optical transmission through periodic arrays, quasicrystals and random aperture arrays, have been investigated in the free space. However, most of the studies have been limited to the far field detection of the transmission resonance. Here, we perform near-field measurements of the SPs on quasicrystal metasurfaces. We discover that the reciprocal vector determines the propagation modes of the SPs in the quasicrystal lattice which can be well explained by the quasi-momentum conservation rule. Our findings demonstrate vast potential in developing plasmonic metasurfaces with unique device functionalities that are controlled by the propagation modes of the SPs in quasicrystals.


Optics Express | 2017

Ultrathin metasurface-based carpet cloak for terahertz wave

Minggui Wei; Quanlong Yang; Xueqian Zhang; Yanfeng Li; Jianqiang Gu; Jiaguang Han

Ultrathin metasurfaces with local phase compensation deliver new schemes to cloaking devices. Here, a large-scale carpet cloak consisting of an ultrathin metasurface is demonstrated numerically and experimentally in the terahertz regime. The proposed carpet cloak is designed based on discontinuous-phase metallic resonators fabricated on a polyimide substrate, offering a wide range of reflection phase variations and an excellent wavefront manipulation along the edges of the bump. The invisibility is verified when the cloak is placed on a reflecting triangular surface (bump). The multi-step discrete phase design method would greatly simplify the design process and is probable to achieve large-dimension cloaks, for applications in radar and antenna systems as a thin, lightweight, and easy-to-fabricate solution for radio and terahertz frequencies.


Optica | 2017

Polarization-controlled asymmetric excitation of surface plasmons

Quan Xu; Xueqian Zhang; Quanlong Yang; Chunxiu Tian; Yuehong Xu; Jianbing Zhang; Hongwei Zhao; Yanfeng Li; Chunmei Ouyang; Zhen Tian; Jianqiang Gu; Xixiang Zhang; Jiaguang Han

Free-space light can be coupled into propagating surface waves at a metal–dielectric interface, known as surface plasmons (SPs). This process has traditionally faced challenges in preserving the incident polarization information and controlling the directionality of the excited SPs. The recently reported polarization-controlled asymmetric excitation of SPs in metasurfaces has attracted much attention for its promise in developing innovative plasmonic devices. However, the unit elements in these works were purposely designed in certain orthogonal polarizations, i.e., linear or circular polarizations, resulting in limited two-level polarization controllability. Here, we introduce a coupled-mode theory to overcome this limit. We demonstrated theoretically and experimentally that, by utilizing the coupling effect between a pair of split-ring-shaped slit resonators, exotic asymmetric excitation of SPs can be obtained under the x-, y-, left-handed circular, and right-handed circular polarization incidences, while the polarization information of the incident light can be preserved in the excited SPs. The versatility of the presented design scheme would offer opportunities for polarization sensing and polarization-controlled plasmonic devices.


APL Materials | 2017

Aperiodic-metamaterial-based absorber

Quanlong Yang; Xieyu Chen; Yanfeng Li; Xueqian Zhang; Yuehong Xu; Zhen Tian; Chunmei Ouyang; Jianqiang Gu; Jiaguang Han

The periodic-metamaterial-based perfect absorber has been studied broadly. Conversely, if the unit cell in the metamaterial-based absorber is arranged aperiodically (aperiodic-metamaterial-based absorber), how does it perform? Inspired by this, here we present a systematic study of the aperiodic-metamaterial-based absorber. By investigating the response of metamaterial absorbers based on periodic, Fibonacci, Thue-Morse, and quasicrystal lattices, we found that aperiodic-metamaterial-based absorbers could display similar absorption behaviors as the periodic one in one hand. However, their absorption behaviors show different tendency depending on the thicknesses of the spacer. Further studies on the angle and polarization dependence of the absorption behavior are also presented.


Light-Science & Applications | 2018

Reflective chiral meta-holography: multiplexing holograms for circularly polarized waves

Qiu Wang; Eric Plum; Quanlong Yang; Xueqian Zhang; Quan Xu; Yuehong Xu; Jiaguang Han

By allowing almost arbitrary distributions of amplitude and phase of electromagnetic waves to be generated by a layer of sub-wavelength-size unit cells, metasurfaces have given rise to the field of meta-holography. However, holography with circularly polarized waves remains complicated as the achiral building blocks of existing meta-holograms inevitably contribute to holographic images generated by both left-handed and right-handed waves. Here we demonstrate how planar chirality enables the fully independent realization of high-efficiency meta-holograms for one circular polarization or the other. Such circular-polarization-selective meta-holograms are based on chiral building blocks that reflect either left-handed or right-handed circularly polarized waves with an orientation-dependent phase. Using terahertz waves, we experimentally demonstrate that this allows the straightforward design of reflective phase meta-holograms, where the use of alternating structures of opposite handedness yields independent holographic images for circularly polarized waves of opposite handedness with negligible polarization cross-talk.Holography: Lighting the path to new applications for holographic imagingA new technique for creating holograms from left- or right-handed circularly polarized light could enable new applications in communications, data storage and three-dimensional displays. Holography provides a promising way to design and reconstruct high-quality, three-dimensional images using light. However, spatial light modulators used to create holograms control only either the intensity or phase of light, have limited spatial resolution and cannot control left- or right-handed circularly polarized light independently. This led a team of researchers led by Jiaguang Han from Tianjin University and Eric Plum from University of Southampton to use chiral metasurfaces to control left- and right-handed electromagnetic waves independently with much higher spatial resolution. The work has shown how to combine different functionalities for left- and right-handed polarized light into a single device, and could lead to new holographic imaging applications.


International Conference on Optical Instruments and Technology 2017: THz/Infrared Technologies and Applications | 2018

Terahertz carpet cloak based on ultrathin metasurface

Minggui Wei; Quanlong Yang; Xueqian Zhang; Yanfeng Li; Jianqiang Gu; Jiaguang Han; Liquan Dong; Xiang Zhang; Cunlin Zhang; Zhiming Huang

Ultrathin metasurfaces with local phase compensation deliver new schemes to cloaking devices. We demonstrate a remarkable large size carpet cloak realized by an ultrathin metasurface at terahertz frequencies. The metasurface cloak is constructed by periodically arranging 12 different elements. The reflected wave front is perfectly reconstructed by an ultrathin metasurface cloak, which perform well under both intensity-sensitive and phase-sensitive detectors. The invisibility is verified when the cloak is placed on a reflecting triangular surface (bump). The multi-step discrete phase design method would greatly simplify the design process and is probable to achieve large-dimension cloaks, for applications in radar and antenna systems as a thin and easy-to-fabricate solution for radio and terahertz frequencies.


Optics Express | 2017

Transmission and plasmonic resonances on quasicrystal metasurfaces

Quanlong Yang; Jianqiang Gu; Yuehong Xu; Yanfeng Li; Xueqian Zhang; Zhen Tian; Chunmei Ouyang; Jiaguang Han

The control of light-matter interaction in metasurfaces offers an unexplored potential for the excitation and manipulation of light. Here, we combine experimental terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and near-field scanning terahertz microscopy to demonstrate the role of reciprocal vectors in the transmission and plasmonic resonances of quasicrystal metasurfaces. An investigation of two-dimensional metasurface structures with different rotationally symmetric quasicrystal arrangements demonstrates that the transmission minima resulting from Woods anomaly are directly related to the surface plasmon resonances. We also find that the surface plasmon resonances of the quasicrystal metasurface were determined by the reciprocal vectors, which could be well explained by the coupling condition of the resonances, and the characteristic frequencies remain un-shifted under various slit sizes. Our findings demonstrate a new potential in developing novel plasmonic metasurfaces.


Optics Express | 2017

Multi-wavelength lenses for terahertz surface wave

Minggui Wei; Quanlong Yang; Quan Xu; Xueqian Zhang; Yanfeng Li; Jianqiang Gu; Jiaguang Han

Metasurface-based surface wave (SW) devices working at multi-wavelength has been continuously arousing enormous curiosity recently, especially in the terahertz community. In this work, we propose a multi-layer metasurface structure composed of metallic slit pairs to build terahertz SW devices. The slit pair has a narrow bandwidth and its response frequency can be altered by its geometric parameter, thereby suppressing the frequency crosstalk and reducing the difficulty of design. By elaborately tailoring the distribution of the slit pairs, a series of achromatic SW lenses (SWLs) working at 0.6, 0.75 and 1 THz are experimentally demonstrated by the near field scanning terahertz microscope (NSTM) system. In addition, a wavelength-division-multiplexer (WDM) is further designed and implemented, which is promising in building multiplexed devices for plasmonic circuits. The structure proposed here cannot only couple the terahertz wave from free space to SWs, but also control its propagation. Moreover, our findings demonstrate the great potential to design multi-wavelength plasmonic metasurface devices, which can be extended to microwave and visible frequencies as well.


Archive | 2017

Dataset for reflective chiral meta-holography: multiplexing holograms for circularly polarized waves

Qiu Wang; Eric Plum; Quanlong Yang; Xueqian Zhang; Quan Xu; Yuehong Xu; Jiaguang Han

Dataset supports: Wang, Q. et al (2018). Reflective chiral meta-holography: multiplexing holograms for circularly polarized waves. Light : Science & Applications 7, 25, doi: 10.1038/s41377-018-0019-8

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