Optica Open
Browse

Mid-IR Light Modulators Enabled by Dynamically Tunable Ultra High-Q Silicon Membrane Metasurfaces

Download (5.58 kB)
preprint
posted on 2025-10-01, 16:00 authored by Felix Ulrich Brikh, Aleksei Ezerskii, Olesia Pashina, Nikita Glebov, Wenping Yin, Sergey V. Makarov, Mihail Petrov, Ivan Sinev, Hatice Altug
Metasurfaces have emerged as a powerful platform to control free-space light at the subwavelength scale, enabling applications in sensing, lasing, nonlinear optics, and quantum photonics. However, their practical deployment is hindered by two key limitations: a tradeoff between low-Q resonances and weak amplitude contrast, and their predominantly static nature allowing only passive functionalities. These challenges are further aggravated in the application-relevant mid-infrared (mid-IR) range, where the lack of suitable low-loss materials and the strong absorption of common substrates such as silicon oxide or sapphire severely constrain performance and scalability. Here, we address these issues with actively tunable single-crystalline silicon membrane metasurfaces that combine high-Q resonances, strong amplitude contrast, and wafer-scale fabrication compatible dimensions for high throughput manufacturing. Our platform achieves record-high measured Q-factors up to 3000 in the mid-IR spectrum, supporting efficient dynamic modulation through two distinct schemes: (i) on-chip electro-thermal tuning via Joule heating, sustaining 50% modulation depth at CMOS-compatible voltages and speeds up to 14.5 kHz, and (ii) ultrafast all-optical modulation via carrier generation in silicon, reaching nanosecond response times and estimated sub-GHz modulation rates. By uniting sharp resonances, strong contrast, large-scale manufacturability, and dynamic tunability, our active silicon membrane metasurfaces advance the frontier of mid-IR nanophotonics and open new opportunities in sensing, free-space communication, thermal radiation management, and quantum technologies.

History

Related Materials

Disclaimer

This arXiv metadata record was not reviewed or approved by, nor does it necessarily express or reflect the policies or opinions of, arXiv.

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC