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Dive into the research topics where Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali is active.

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Featured researches published by Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali.


arXiv: Optics | 2016

Multiwavelength polarization-insensitive lenses based on dielectric metasurfaces with meta-molecules

Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; Andrei Faraon

Metasurfaces are nano-structured devices composed of arrays of subwavelength scatterers (or meta-atoms) that manipulate the wavefront, polarization, or intensity of light. Like other diffractive optical devices, metasurfaces suffer from significant chromatic aberrations that limit their bandwidth. Here, we present a method for designing multiwavelength metasurfaces using unit cells with multiple meta-atoms, or meta-molecules. Transmissive lenses with efficiencies as high as 72% and numerical apertures as high as 0.46 simultaneously operating at 915 nm and 1550 nm are demonstrated. With proper scaling, these devices can be used in applications where operation at distinct known wavelengths is required, like various fluorescence microscopy techniques.


Nature Communications | 2016

Miniature optical planar camera based on a wide-angle metasurface doublet corrected for monochromatic aberrations

Amir Arbabi; Ehsan Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; Seunghoon Han; Andrei Faraon

Optical metasurfaces are two-dimensional arrays of nano-scatterers that modify optical wavefronts at subwavelength spatial resolution. They are poised to revolutionize optics by enabling complex low-cost systems where multiple metasurfaces are lithographically stacked and integrated with electronics. For imaging applications, metasurface stacks can perform sophisticated image corrections and can be directly integrated with image sensors. Here we demonstrate this concept with a miniature flat camera integrating a monolithic metasurface lens doublet corrected for monochromatic aberrations, and an image sensor. The doublet lens, which acts as a fisheye photographic objective, has a small f-number of 0.9, an angle-of-view larger than 60° × 60°, and operates at 850 nm wavelength with 70% focusing efficiency. The camera exhibits nearly diffraction-limited image quality, which indicates the potential of this technology in the development of optical systems for microscopy, photography, and computer vision.


arXiv: Optics | 2017

Controlling the sign of chromatic dispersion in diffractive optics with dielectric metasurfaces

Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; Andrei Faraon

Diffraction gratings disperse light in a rainbow of colors with the opposite order than refractive prisms, a phenomenon known as negative dispersion [1, 2]. While refractive dispersion can be controlled via material refractive index, diffractive dispersion is fundamentally an interference effect dictated by geometry. Here we show that this fundamental property can be altered using dielectric metasurfaces [3-5], and we experimentally demonstrate diffractive gratings and focusing mirrors with positive, zero, and hyper negative dispersion. These optical elements are implemented using a reflective metasurface composed of dielectric nano-posts that provide simultaneous control over phase and its wavelength derivative. In addition, as a first practical application, we demonstrate a focusing mirror that exhibits a five fold reduction in chromatic dispersion, and thus an almost three times increase in operation bandwidth compared to a regular diffractive element. This concept challenges the generally accepted dispersive properties of diffractive optical devices and extends their applications and functionalities.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Multiwavelength metasurfaces through spatial multiplexing.

Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; Andrei Faraon

Metasurfaces are two-dimensional arrangements of optical scatterers rationally arranged to control optical wavefronts. Despite the significant advances made in wavefront engineering through metasurfaces, most of these devices are designed for and operate at a single wavelength. Here we show that spatial multiplexing schemes can be applied to increase the number of operation wavelengths. We use a high contrast dielectric transmittarray platform with amorphous silicon nano-posts to demonstrate polarization insensitive metasurface lenses with a numerical aperture of 0.46, that focus light at 915 and 1550 nm to the same focal distance. We investigate two different methods, one based on large scale segmentation and one on meta-atom interleaving, and compare their performances. An important feature of this method is its simple generalization to adding more wavelengths or new functionalities to a device. Therefore, it provides a relatively straightforward method for achieving multi-functional and multiwavelength metasurface devices.


Optics Express | 2016

High efficiency double-wavelength dielectric metasurface lenses with dichroic birefringent meta-atoms.

Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; Andrei Faraon

Metasurfaces are ultrathin optical structures that manipulate optical wavefronts. Most metasurface devices which deflect light are designed for operation at a single wavelength, and their function changes as the wavelength is varied. Here we propose and demonstrate a double-wavelength metasurface based on polarization dependent dielectric meta-atoms that control the phases of two orthogonal polarizations independently. Using this platform, we design lenses that focus light at 915 and 780 nm with perpendicular linear polarizations to the same focal distance. Lenses with numerical apertures up to 0.7 and efficiencies from 65% to above 90% are demonstrated. In addition to the high efficiency and numerical aperture, an important feature of this technique is that the two operation wavelengths can be chosen to be arbitrarily close. These characteristics make these lenses especially attractive for fluorescence microscopy applications.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Orbital Angular Momentum-based Space Division Multiplexing for High-capacity Underwater Optical Communications

Yongxiong Ren; Long Li; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Zhe Zhao; Guodong Xie; Yinwen Cao; Nisar Ahmed; Yan Yan; Cong Liu; Asher J. Willner; Solyman Ashrafi; Moshe Tur; Andrei Faraon; Alan E. Willner

To increase system capacity of underwater optical communications, we employ the spatial domain to simultaneously transmit multiple orthogonal spatial beams, each carrying an independent data channel. In this paper, we show up to a 40-Gbit/s link by multiplexing and transmitting four green orbital angular momentum (OAM) beams through a single aperture. Moreover, we investigate the degrading effects of scattering/turbidity, water current, and thermal gradient-induced turbulence, and we find that thermal gradients cause the most distortions and turbidity causes the most loss. We show systems results using two different data generation techniques, one at 1064 nm for 10-Gbit/s/beam and one at 520 nm for 1-Gbit/s/beam; we use both techniques since present data-modulation technologies are faster for infrared (IR) than for green. For the 40-Gbit/s link, data is modulated in the IR, and OAM imprinting is performed in the green using a specially-designed metasurface phase mask. For the 4-Gbit/s link, a green laser diode is directly modulated. Finally, we show that inter-channel crosstalk induced by thermal gradients can be mitigated using multi-channel equalisation processing.


Nano Letters | 2017

Visible Wavelength Color Filters Using Dielectric Subwavelength Gratings for Backside-Illuminated CMOS Image Sensor Technologies

Yu Horie; Seunghoon Han; Jeong-yub Lee; Jaekwan Kim; Yongsung Kim; Amir Arbabi; Chang-gyun Shin; Lilong Shi; Ehsan Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Hong-Seok Lee; Sungwoo Hwang; Andrei Faraon

We report transmissive color filters based on subwavelength dielectric gratings that can replace conventional dye-based color filters used in backside-illuminated CMOS image sensor (BSI CIS) technologies. The filters are patterned in an 80 nm-thick poly silicon film on a 115 nm-thick SiO2 spacer layer. They are optimized for operating at the primary RGB colors, exhibit peak transmittance of 60-80%, and have an almost insensitive response over a ± 20° angular range. This technology enables shrinking of the pixel sizes down to near a micrometer.


Nature Photonics | 2018

Wavefront shaping with disorder-engineered metasurfaces

Mooseok Jang; Yu Horie; Atsushi Shibukawa; Joshua Brake; Yan Liu; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Amir Arbabi; Haowen Ruan; Andrei Faraon; Changhuei Yang

Recently, wavefront shaping with disordered media has demonstrated optical manipulation capabilities beyond those of conventional optics, including extended volume, aberration-free focusing and subwavelength focusing. However, translating these capabilities to useful applications has remained challenging as the input–output characteristics of the disordered media (P variables) need to be exhaustively determined via O(P) measurements. Here, we propose a paradigm shift where the disorder is specifically designed so its exact input–output characteristics are known a priori and can be used with only a few alignment steps. We implement this concept with a disorder-engineered metasurface, which exhibits additional unique features for wavefront shaping such as a large optical memory effect range in combination with a wide angular scattering range, excellent stability, and a tailorable angular scattering profile. Using this designed metasurface with wavefront shaping, we demonstrate high numerical aperture (NA > 0.5) focusing and fluorescence imaging with an estimated ~2.2 × 108 addressable points in an ~8 mm field of view.Using designer-disordered metasurfaces, optical input–output characteristics, which are typically difficult to obtain, can be known a priori. The approach is used for wavefront shaping, high-numerical-aperture focusing and fluorescence imaging.


Nature Communications | 2018

MEMS-tunable dielectric metasurface lens

Ehsan Arbabi; Amir Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Yu Horie; MohammadSadegh Faraji-Dana; Andrei Faraon

Varifocal lenses, conventionally implemented by changing the axial distance between multiple optical elements, have a wide range of applications in imaging and optical beam scanning. The use of conventional bulky refractive elements makes these varifocal lenses large, slow, and limits their tunability. Metasurfaces, a new category of lithographically defined diffractive devices, enable thin and lightweight optical elements with precisely engineered phase profiles. Here we demonstrate tunable metasurface doublets, based on microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), with more than 60 diopters (about 4%) change in the optical power upon a 1-μm movement of one metasurface, and a scanning frequency that can potentially reach a few kHz. They can also be integrated with a third metasurface to make compact microscopes (~1 mm thick) with a large corrected field of view (~500 μm or 40 degrees) and fast axial scanning for 3D imaging. This paves the way towards MEMS-integrated metasurfaces as a platform for tunable and reconfigurable optics.Conventional refractive elements are bulky, thick and offer limited active tunability. Here, the authors demonstrate MEMS-based tunable metasurface doublets with more than 60 diopters change in the optical power upon a 1-micron movement of a membrane with one of the metasurface elements.


Optics Express | 2016

Wide bandwidth and high resolution planar filter array based on DBR-metasurface-DBR structures

Yu Horie; Amir Arbabi; Ehsan Arbabi; Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali; Andrei Faraon

We propose and experimentally demonstrate a planar array of optical bandpass filters composed of low loss dielectric metasurface layers sandwiched between two distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs). The two DBRs form a Fabry-Pérot resonator whose center wavelength is controlled by the design of the transmissive metasurface layer which functions as a phase shifting element. We demonstrate an array of bandpass filters with spatially varying center wavelengths covering a wide range of operation wavelengths of 250nm around λ = 1550nm (Δλ/λ = 16%). The center wavelengths of each filter are independently controlled only by changing the in-plane geometry of the sandwiched metasurfaces, and the experimentally measured quality factors are larger than 700. The demonstrated filter array can be directly integrated on top of photodetector arrays to realize on-chip high-resolution spectrometers with free-space coupling.

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Dive into the Seyedeh Mahsa Kamali's collaboration.

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Ehsan Arbabi

California Institute of Technology

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Amir Arbabi

California Institute of Technology

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Andrei Faraon

California Institute of Technology

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Yu Horie

California Institute of Technology

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Seunghoon Han

California Institute of Technology

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Connie J. Chang-Hasnain

California Institute of Technology

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Mohammad Sadegh Faraji-Dana

California Institute of Technology

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MohammadSadegh Faraji-Dana

California Institute of Technology

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Fumio Koyama

California Institute of Technology

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Hyounghan Kwon

California Institute of Technology

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