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Dive into the research topics where Ting S. Luk is active.

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Featured researches published by Ting S. Luk.


Nano Letters | 2015

Polarization-Independent Silicon Metadevices for Efficient Optical Wavefront Control

Katie E. Chong; Isabelle Staude; Anthony James; Jason Dominguez; Sheng Liu; Salvatore Campione; Ganapathi S. Subramania; Ting S. Luk; Manuel Decker; Dragomir N. Neshev; Igal Brener; Yuri S. Kivshar

We experimentally demonstrate a functional silicon metadevice at telecom wavelengths that can efficiently control the wavefront of optical beams by imprinting a spatially varying transmittance phase independent of the polarization of the incident beam. Near-unity transmittance efficiency and close to 0-2π phase coverage are enabled by utilizing the localized electric and magnetic Mie-type resonances of low-loss silicon nanoparticles tailored to behave as electromagnetically dual-symmetric scatterers. We apply this concept to realize a metadevice that converts a Gaussian beam into a vortex beam. The required spatial distribution of transmittance phases is achieved by a variation of the lattice spacing as a single geometric control parameter.


Nature Communications | 2015

Phased-array sources based on nonlinear metamaterial nanocavities

Omri Wolf; Salvatore Campione; Alexander Benz; Arvind P. Ravikumar; Sheng Liu; Ting S. Luk; Emil A. Kadlec; Eric A. Shaner; J. F. Klem; Michael B. Sinclair; Igal Brener

Coherent superposition of light from subwavelength sources is an attractive prospect for the manipulation of the direction, shape and polarization of optical beams. This phenomenon constitutes the basis of phased arrays, commonly used at microwave and radio frequencies. Here we propose a new concept for phased-array sources at infrared frequencies based on metamaterial nanocavities coupled to a highly nonlinear semiconductor heterostructure. Optical pumping of the nanocavity induces a localized, phase-locked, nonlinear resonant polarization that acts as a source feed for a higher-order resonance of the nanocavity. Varying the nanocavity design enables the production of beams with arbitrary shape and polarization. As an example, we demonstrate two second harmonic phased-array sources that perform two optical functions at the second harmonic wavelength (∼5 μm): a beam splitter and a polarizing beam splitter. Proper design of the nanocavity and nonlinear heterostructure will enable such phased arrays to span most of the infrared spectrum.


Physical Review B | 2014

Directional perfect absorption using deep subwavelength low-permittivity films

Ting S. Luk; Salvatore Campione; Iltai Kim; Simin Feng; Young Chul Jun; Sheng Liu; Jeremy B. Wright; Igal Brener; Peter B. Catrysse; Shanhui Fan; Michael B. Sinclair

We experimentally demonstrate single beam directional perfect absorption (to within experimental accuracy) of


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Enhanced third harmonic generation from the epsilon-near-zero modes of ultrathin films

Ting S. Luk; Domenico de Ceglia; Sheng Liu; Gordon A. Keeler; Rohit P. Prasankumar; Maria Antonietta Vincenti; Michael Scalora; Michael B. Sinclair; Salvatore Campione

p


Scientific Reports | 2016

Metasurface Broadband Solar Absorber

Abul K. Azad; Wilton J. M. Kort-Kamp; Milan Sykora; Nina R. Weisse-Bernstein; Ting S. Luk; Antoinette J. Taylor; Diego A. R. Dalvit; Hou-Tong Chen

-polarized light in the near-infrared using unpatterned, deep subwavelength films of indium tin oxide (ITO) on Ag. The experimental perfect absorption occurs slightly above the epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) frequency of ITO, where the permittivity is less than 1 in magnitude. Remarkably, we obtain perfect absorption for films whose thickness is as low as \ensuremath{\sim}1/50th of the operating free-space wavelength and whose single pass attenuation is only \ensuremath{\sim}5%. We further derive simple analytical conditions for perfect absorption in the subwavelength-film regime that reveal the constraints that the thin layer permittivity must satisfy if perfect absorption is to be achieved. Then, to get a physical insight on the perfect absorption properties, we analyze the eigenmodes of the layered structure by computing both the real-frequency/complex-wavenumber and the complex-frequency/real-wavenumber modal dispersion diagrams. These analyses allow us to attribute the experimental perfect absorption condition to the crossover between bound and leaky behavior of one eigenmode of the layered structure. Both modal methods show that perfect absorption occurs at a frequency slightly larger than the ENZ frequency, in agreement with experimental results, and both methods predict a second perfect absorption condition at higher frequencies, attributed to another crossover between bound and leaky behavior of the same eigenmode. Our results greatly expand the list of materials that can be considered for use as ultrathin perfect absorbers and provide a methodology for the design of absorbing systems at any desired frequency.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Distributed feedback gallium nitride nanowire lasers

Jeremy B. Wright; Salvatore Campione; Sheng Liu; Julio A. Martinez; Huiwen Xu; Ting S. Luk; Qiming Li; George T. Wang; B. S. Swartzentruber; Luke F. Lester; Igal Brener

We experimentally demonstrate efficient third harmonic generation from an indium tin oxide nanofilm (λ/42 thick) on a glass substrate for a pump wavelength of 1.4 μm. A conversion efficiency of 3.3 × 10−6 is achieved by exploiting the field enhancement properties of the epsilon-near-zero mode with an enhancement factor of 200. This nanoscale frequency conversion method is applicable to other plasmonic materials and reststrahlen materials in proximity of the longitudinal optical phonon frequencies.


Optics Express | 2013

Near-infrared surface plasmon polariton dispersion control with hyperbolic metamaterials

Ting S. Luk; Iltai Kim; Salvatore Campione; Stephen W. Howell; Ganapathi S. Subramania; Robert K. Grubbs; Igal Brener; Hou-Tong Chen; Shanhui Fan; Michael B. Sinclair

We demonstrate a broadband, polarization independent, wide-angle absorber based on a metallic metasurface architecture, which accomplishes greater than 90% absorptance in the visible and near-infrared range of the solar spectrum, and exhibits low absorptivity (emissivity) at mid- and far-infrared wavelengths. The complex unit cell of the metasurface solar absorber consists of eight pairs of gold nano-resonators that are separated from a gold ground plane by a thin silicon dioxide spacer. Our experimental measurements reveal high-performance absorption over a wide range of incidence angles for both s- and p-polarizations. We also investigate numerically the frequency-dependent field and current distributions to elucidate how the absorption occurs within the metasurface structure.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Doping-tunable thermal emission from plasmon polaritons in semiconductor epsilon-near-zero thin films

Young Chul Jun; Ting S. Luk; A. Robert Ellis; J. F. Klem; Igal Brener

Achieving single-mode laser operation in nanowire lasers remains a challenge due to a lack of mode selection approaches. We have implemented single-mode lasing using distributed feedback by externally coupling gallium nitride nanowires to a dielectric grating to achieve mode-control. The effective periodicity of the grating experienced by the nanowire was altered using nanomanipulation to change the angular alignment between the nanowire and the grating. The effective periodicity controls the spectral location of the distributed feedback stop-band. Single-mode emission was achieved at an alignment, where the designed periodicity of the grating was experienced by the nanowire.


Optics Express | 2016

Experimental verification of epsilon-near-zero plasmon polariton modes in degenerately doped semiconductor nanolayers

Salvatore Campione; Iltai Kim; Domenico de Ceglia; Gordon A. Keeler; Ting S. Luk

We demonstrate experimentally signatures and dispersion control of surface plasmon polaritons from 1 to 1.8 µm using periodic multilayer metallo-dielectric hyperbolic metamaterials. The fabricated structures are comprised of smooth films with very low metal filling factor. The measured dispersion properties of these hyperbolic metamaterials agree well with calculations using transfer matrix, finite-difference time-domain, and effective medium approximation methods despite using only 2.5 periods. The enhancement factor in the local photonic density of states from the studied samples in the near-infrared wavelength region is determined to be 2.5-3.5. Development of this type of metamaterial is relevant to sub-wavelength imaging, spontaneous emission and thermophotovoltaic applications.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Directional and monochromatic thermal emitter from epsilon-near-zero conditions in semiconductor hyperbolic metamaterials.

Salvatore Campione; François Marquier; Jean Paul Hugonin; A. Robert Ellis; J. F. Klem; Michael B. Sinclair; Ting S. Luk

We utilize the unique dispersion properties of leaky plasmon polaritons in epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) thin films to demonstrate thermal radiation control. Owing to its highly flat dispersion above the light line, a thermally excited leaky wave at the ENZ frequency out-couples into free space without any scattering structures, resulting in a narrowband, wide-angle, p-polarized thermal emission spectrum. We demonstrate this idea by measuring angle- and polarization-resolved thermal emission spectra from a single layer of unpatterned, doped semiconductors with deep-subwavelength film thickness ( d/λ0 ∼ 6×10−3, where d is the film thickness and  λ0 is the free space wavelength). We show that this semiconductor ENZ film effectively works as a leaky wave thermal radiation antenna, which generates far-field radiation from a thermally excited mode. The use of semiconductors makes the radiation frequency highly tunable by controlling doping densities and also facilitates device integration with other components. Ther...

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Salvatore Campione

Sandia National Laboratories

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Igal Brener

Sandia National Laboratories

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Sheng Liu

Sandia National Laboratories

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Michael B. Sinclair

Sandia National Laboratories

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George T. Wang

Sandia National Laboratories

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Jeremy B. Wright

Sandia National Laboratories

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Joel R. Wendt

Sandia National Laboratories

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Gordon A. Keeler

Sandia National Laboratories

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Qiming Li

University of New Mexico

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