Voltage-gated optics and plasmonics enabled by solid-state proton pumping

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Abstract

Devices with locally-addressable and dynamically tunable optical properties underpin emerging technologies such as high-resolution reflective displays and dynamic holography. The optical properties of metals such as Y and Mg can be reversibly switched by hydrogen loading, and hydrogen-switched mirrors and plasmonic devices have been realized, but challenges remain to achieve electrical, localized and reversible control. Here we report a nanoscale solid-state proton switch that allows for electrical control of optical properties through electrochemical hydrogen gating. We demonstrate the generality and versatility of this approach by realizing tunability of a range of device characteristics including transmittance, interference color, and plasmonic resonance. We further discover and exploit a giant modulation of the effective refractive index of the gate dielectric. The simple gate structure permits device thickness down to ~20 nanometers, which can enable device scaling into the deep subwavelength regime, and has potential applications in addressable plasmonic devices and reconfigurable metamaterials.

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Huang, M., Jun Tan, A., Büttner, F., Liu, H., Ruan, Q., Hu, W., … Beach, G. S. D. (2019). Voltage-gated optics and plasmonics enabled by solid-state proton pumping. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13131-3

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