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Dive into the research topics where Romain Blanchard is active.

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Featured researches published by Romain Blanchard.


Nano Letters | 2012

Aberration-Free Ultrathin Flat Lenses and Axicons at Telecom Wavelengths Based on Plasmonic Metasurfaces

Francesco Aieta; Patrice Genevet; Mikhail A. Kats; Nanfang Yu; Romain Blanchard; Z. Gaburro; Federico Capasso

The concept of optical phase discontinuities is applied to the design and demonstration of aberration-free planar lenses and axicons, comprising a phased array of ultrathin subwavelength-spaced optical antennas. The lenses and axicons consist of V-shaped nanoantennas that introduce a radial distribution of phase discontinuities, thereby generating respectively spherical wavefronts and nondiffracting Bessel beams at telecom wavelengths. Simulations are also presented to show that our aberration-free designs are applicable to high-numerical aperture lenses such as flat microscope objectives.


Nature Materials | 2013

Nanometre optical coatings based on strong interference effects in highly absorbing media.

Mikhail A. Kats; Romain Blanchard; Patrice Genevet; Federico Capasso

Optical coatings, which consist of one or more films of dielectric or metallic materials, are widely used in applications ranging from mirrors to eyeglasses and photography lenses. Many conventional dielectric coatings rely on Fabry-Perot-type interference, involving multiple optical passes through transparent layers with thicknesses of the order of the wavelength to achieve functionalities such as anti-reflection, high-reflection and dichroism. Highly absorbing dielectrics are typically not used because it is generally accepted that light propagation through such media destroys interference effects. We show that under appropriate conditions interference can instead persist in ultrathin, highly absorbing films of a few to tens of nanometres in thickness, and demonstrate a new type of optical coating comprising such a film on a metallic substrate, which selectively absorbs various frequency ranges of the incident light. These coatings have a low sensitivity to the angle of incidence and require minimal amounts of absorbing material that can be as thin as 5-20 nm for visible light. This technology has the potential for a variety of applications from ultrathin photodetectors and solar cells to optical filters, to labelling, and even the visual arts and jewellery.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Ultra-thin plasmonic optical vortex plate based on phase discontinuities

Patrice Genevet; Nanfang Yu; Francesco Aieta; Jiao Lin; Mikhail A. Kats; Romain Blanchard; Marlan O. Scully; Z. Gaburro; Federico Capasso

A flat optical device that generates optical vortices with a variety of topological charges is demonstrated. This device spatially modulates light beams over a distance much smaller than the wavelength in the direction of propagation by means of an array of V-shaped plasmonic antennas with sub-wavelength separation. Optical vortices are shown to develop after a sub-wavelength propagation distance from the array, a feature that has major potential implications for integrated optics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Ultra-thin perfect absorber employing a tunable phase change material

Mikhail A. Kats; Deepika Sharma; Jiao Lin; Patrice Genevet; Romain Blanchard; Z. Yang; M. M. Qazilbash; D. N. Basov; Shriram Ramanathan; Federico Capasso

We show that perfect absorption can be achieved in a system comprising a single lossy dielectric layer of thickness much smaller than the incident wavelength on an opaque substrate by utilizing the nontrivial phase shifts at interfaces between lossy media. This design is implemented with an ultra-thin (∼λ/65) vanadium dioxide (VO2) layer on sapphire, temperature tuned in the vicinity of the VO2 insulator-to-metal phase transition, leading to 99.75% absorption at λ = 11.6 μm. The structural simplicity and large tuning range (from ∼80% to 0.25% in reflectivity) are promising for thermal emitters, modulators, and bolometers.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2013

Flat Optics: Controlling Wavefronts With Optical Antenna Metasurfaces

Nanfang Yu; Patrice Genevet; Francesco Aieta; Mikhail A. Kats; Romain Blanchard; Guillaume Aoust; Jean-Philippe Tetienne; Z. Gaburro; Federico Capasso

Conventional optical components rely on the propagation effect to control the phase and polarization of light beams. One can instead exploit abrupt phase and polarization changes associated with scattered light from optical resonators to control light propagation. In this paper, we discuss the optical responses of anisotropic plasmonic antennas and a new class of planar optical components (“metasurfaces”) based on arrays of these antennas. To demonstrate the versatility of metasurfaces, we show the design and experimental realization of a number of flat optical components: 1) metasurfaces with a constant interfacial phase gradient that deflect light into arbitrary directions; 2) metasurfaces with anisotropic optical responses that create light beams of arbitrary polarization over a wide wavelength range; 3) planar lenses and axicons that generate spherical wavefronts and nondiffracting Bessel beams, respectively; and 4) metasurfaces with spiral phase distributions that create optical vortex beams of well-defined orbital angular momentum.


Nano Letters | 2010

Large Enhancement of Nonlinear Optical Phenomena by Plasmonic Nanocavity Gratings

Patrice Genevet; Jean-Philippe Tetienne; Evangelos Gatzogiannis; Romain Blanchard; Mikhail A. Kats; Marlan O. Scully; Federico Capasso

Enhancing nonlinear processes at the nanoscale is a crucial step toward the development of nanophotonics and new spectroscopy techniques. Here we demonstrate a novel plasmonic structure, called plasmonic nanocavity grating, which is shown to dramatically enhance surface nonlinear optical processes. It consists of resonant cavities that are periodically arranged to combine local and grating resonances. The four-wave mixing signal generated in our gold nanocavity grating is enhanced by a factor up to ≈2000, 2 orders of magnitude higher than that previously reported.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Giant birefringence in optical antenna arrays with widely tailorable optical anisotropy

Mikhail A. Kats; Patrice Genevet; Guillaume Aoust; Nanfang Yu; Romain Blanchard; Francesco Aieta; Z. Gaburro; Federico Capasso

The manipulation of light by conventional optical components such as lenses, prisms, and waveplates involves engineering of the wavefront as it propagates through an optically thick medium. A unique class of flat optical components with high functionality can be designed by introducing abrupt phase shifts into the optical path, utilizing the resonant response of arrays of scatterers with deeply subwavelength thickness. As an application of this concept, we report a theoretical and experimental study of birefringent arrays of two-dimensional (V- and Y-shaped) optical antennas which support two orthogonal charge-oscillation modes and serve as broadband, anisotropic optical elements that can be used to locally tailor the amplitude, phase, and polarization of light. The degree of optical anisotropy can be designed by controlling the interference between the waves scattered by the antenna modes; in particular, we observe a striking effect in which the anisotropy disappears as a result of destructive interference. These properties are captured by a simple, physical model in which the antenna modes are treated as independent, orthogonally oriented harmonic oscillators.


Optics Letters | 2013

Thermal tuning of mid-infrared plasmonic antenna arrays using a phase change material

Mikhail A. Kats; Romain Blanchard; Patrice Genevet; Z. Yang; M. M. Qazilbash; D.N. Basov; Shriram Ramanathan; Federico Capasso

We demonstrate that the resonances of infrared plasmonic antennas can be tuned or switched on/off by taking advantage of the thermally driven insulator-to-metal phase transition in vanadium dioxide (VO(2)). Y-shaped antennas were fabricated on a 180 nm film of VO(2) deposited on a sapphire substrate, and their resonances were shown to depend on the temperature of the VO(2) film in proximity of its phase transition, in good agreement with full-wave simulations. We achieved tunability of the resonance wavelength of approximately 10% (>1 μm at λ~10 μm).


Physical Review X | 2013

Vanadium Dioxide as a Natural Disordered Metamaterial: Perfect Thermal Emission and Large Broadband Negative Differential Thermal Emittance

Mikhail A. Kats; Romain Blanchard; Shuyan Zhang; Patrice Genevet; Changhyun Ko; Shriram Ramanathan; Federico Capasso

thermal radiation and appears colder on an infrared camera. Our experimental approach allows for a direct measurement and extraction of wavelength- and temperature-dependent thermal emittance. We anticipate that emissivity engineering with thin-film geometries comprising VO2 and other thermochromic materials will find applications in infrared camouflage, thermal regulation, and infrared tagging and labeling.


Optics Express | 2011

Spoof plasmon analogue of metal-insulator-metal waveguides

Mikhail A. Kats; David Woolf; Romain Blanchard; Nanfang Yu; Federico Capasso

We describe the properties of guided modes in metallic parallel plate structures with subwavelength corrugation on the surfaces of both conductors, which we refer to as spoof-insulator-spoof (SIS) waveguides, in close analogy to metal-insulator-metal (MIM) waveguides in plasmonics. A dispersion relation for SIS waveguides is derived, and the modes are shown to arise from the coupling of conventional waveguide modes with the localized modes of the grooves in the SIS structure. SIS waveguides have numerous design parameters and can be engineered to guide modes with very low group velocities and adiabatically convert light between conventional photonic modes and plasmonic ones.

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Mikhail A. Kats

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Nanfang Yu

Nanyang Technological University

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Patrice Genevet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrice Genevet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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