Introduction

Spin angular momentum (SAM) and orbital angular momentum (OAM) are associated with the polarisation and phase of the optical field, respectively.1 A striking difference between these momenta is the range of allowed values. SAM can be ±ħ per photon, expressed as left or right circular polarisation, while OAM has an unbounded value of ℓħ per photon,2 being an integer. In an anisotropic and inhomogeneous medium, these otherwise independent momenta can be made to interact, changing both the polarisation and phase of the beam.3 This change depends on the incident beam's polarisation and the medium's topology stemming from its inhomogeneity. This relationship can be described by the Pancharatnam–Berry (geometrical) phase,4 and is what allows a beam to experience different optical paths associated with the trajectory of the polarisation evolution on the Poincaré sphere.5 Recently, this phenomenon has enabled Pancharatnam–Berry phase optical elements:6,7 devices that control the output beam's wavefront according to the polarisation of the input beam. These devices could easily be inserted into the beam path of existing spectroscopic, nano-imaging or communication systems, as they do not rely on diffraction, adding OAM-based functionality that has the potential to distinguish between molecules of different chirality, enhance optical circular dichroism8 and encode multiple bits of information onto a single photon.9

Existing Pancharatnam–Berry phase optical elements include q-plates,3 made of liquid crystals, and computer-generated subwavelength gratings,6,10 made of micron-size dielectric features. These devices transform polarisation superposition states into complex structures rich in polarisation and phase singularities.11 However, the currently available technologies each have their respective limitations. Liquid crystal systems are highly susceptible to chemical degradation and feature a relatively large central singularity that limits their resolution. In the case of the gratings, their micron-size features prevent them from working in the visible regime. Moreover, their thicknesses prevent either system from operating with femtosecond pulses. Thus, there is a need for nanoscale, robust Pancharatnam–Berry phase optical elements capable of working in the visible spectrum.

In this work, we demonstrate a novel metasurface capable of optical spin-to-orbit coupling in the visible regime using a space-variant array of plasmonic gold nano-antennas with subwavelength thickness and a central singularity. Nano-fabrication advances have enabled the development of metamaterials capable of unconventionally controlling the flow of electromagnetic energy in the subwavelength domain.12,13 Recent demonstrations of ultrathin lenses, axicons14 and spiral phase plates15 use arrays of nano-antennas with different shapes to control the phase of optical fields.16 Particular arrangements of nanoparticles have also exhibited similar phase control.17,18 In such demonstrations, the optical field is manipulated locally by engineering the plasmonic resonances of individual nano-antennas such that the field experiences a different phase retardance at each nano-antenna. Thus, the desired optical device is designed by arranging different individual nano-antennas in the transverse plane.15 Instead, we propose an array of identical nano-antennas, possessing well-defined topology, thus allowing us to control the beam's phase-front in the visible regime according to the Pancharatnam–Berry phase mechanism.

Materials and methods

First, we consider a metasurface consisting of a uniform, square lattice array of carefully designed, identical gold nano-antennas on a glass substrate. The nano-antenna dimensions and periodicity are chosen such that each element of the array exhibits a half-wavelength (i.e., π) optical retardation between two orthogonal linear polarisations. This metasurface is birefringent, since its action depends on the incident polarisation. For instance, it changes the helicity of normally incident, circularly polarised light, transforming left-circular polarisation into right-circular and vice versa. The light and array exchange SAM since the helicity of the input and the output photons are not identical, i.e., . By conservation of angular momentum, the array should consequently spin about the beam's propagation axis.19 Although this rotation does not change the polarisation state of the output, the evolution trajectory of states on the polarisation Poincaré sphere does change. Thus, such a physical rotation introduces a global phase proportional to half of the solid angle enclosed by the polarisation trajectories (pole-to-pole) on the polarisation Poincaré sphere.5 This global phase is equal to |2θ|, where θ describes the angle over which the array has rotated. Next, we consider the particular case of a cylindrically symmetric metasurface possessing a transverse topological charge q=1—meaning the nano-antenna orientation performs one full rotation along a path surrounding the origin. Because the metasurface is rotationally invariant about the plate origin, it does not exchange angular momentum with the optical field. Nonetheless, the helicities of incoming and outgoing beams are non-identical. Thus, the conservation of angular momentum dictates that the change in the SAM must be transformed into OAM.

For left and right circularly polarised input beams ΔSz is +2ħ and −2ħ per photon, respectively. Therefore, the metasurface switches the polarisation of the incoming beam and induces an OAM of =±2, as schematically summarized in Figure 1. This process is inherently geometry dependent and happens in a subwavelength scale. The intensity distribution of the emerging beam is no longer Gaussian: imprinting the helical phase-front changes it to a hypergeometric Gaussian distribution, which is not shape-invariant upon propagation.20 In an ideal, lossless structure, all light interacting with the nano-antennas would experience spin-to-orbit coupling. In a practical device, the conversion efficiency also depends on the uniformity of the nano-antennas' dimensions (i.e., consistency of phase retardation at a given wavelength) and the absorption coefficient of the metal.

Figure 1
figure 1

Schematic representation of spin-to-orbit coupling through a metasurface. The polarisation of the incident light is switched from left-handed circular to right-handed circular, giving the beam an OAM value of 2 due to conservation of angular momentum. Inset: locally, the circularly symmetric nano-antennas can be approximated as a uniform array, simplifying device modeling. OAM, orbital angular momentum.

We selected L-shaped nano-antennas for our realization because their dual resonances can be engineered to have equal amplitudes and a π phase retardance between specific linear polarisations. The plasmonic nano-antenna array was modeled as gold on a glass substrate coated in indium tin oxide (ITO) using a fully vectorial Maxwell equation solver based on the finite difference time domain method (Lumerical FDTD 8). We assumed a perfectly periodic square array of nano-antennas by applying Bloch boundary conditions to the limits of the array's unit cell. The gold's material dispersion was taken into account by using frequency-dependent material permittivities. The permittivities of glass and gold were obtained from the Ref. 21, while that of ITO was obtained from spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements of the substrate sample. The excitation source was taken as a circularly polarised plane wave impinging at normal incidence onto the structure. For the calculations of the vector field amplitudes and phase retardance, the transmitted Ex and Ey field components are calculated after a propagation distance of 4 μm in order to ensure a homogenous amplitude and phase distribution in the transverse direction. The dimensions of the antenna are designed such that the linear polarisation resonances of a nano-antenna (shown at top of Figure 2a) have a π-phase shift between them. Consequently, circular polarised beams (Figure 2a), which can be described as equal amplitudes of the two linear polarisations, will be switched from one circular-handedness to the other by this π-phase shift. While this retardance of π is possible between specific linear polarisations, this design exhibits slightly different retardance for circularly polarised fields due to some ‘cross-talk’ between the two excited linearly polarised resonances. Figure 2b describes the wavelength-dependent polarisation state of the transmitted light. While this cross-talk reduces the conversion efficiency (Figure 2b (black)), the structure remains capable of sufficient retardance to exhibit spin-to-orbit coupling of wavelengths (λ) near 780 nm, which has not been shown before in a plasmonic device or any structure with λ/30 thickness.

Figure 2
figure 2

Structure and optical properties of the fabricated metasurface. (a) Simulated near-field distribution of the nano-antenna's resonances for different input polarisations. The anti-diagonal and diagonal linear polarisations excite two different modes, giving the metasurface its birefringent characteristics. The lower insets are the simulated near-field distributions for right and left-circularly polarised beams, respectively. (b) Calculated intensity of the transmitted right-circularly polarised (unconverted) beam, blue curve, and left-circularly polarised (converted) beam, red curve, for different wavelengths. The fields are normalized to the intensity of the incident beam. The conversion efficiency is shown as the solid black curve, which indicates an efficiency of 6% at a wavelength of 780 nm. The dimensions of the fabricated sample are used for all simulations. (c) SEM images of the fabricated metasurface, consisting of an inhomogeneous array of L-shaped gold nano-antennas. The nano-antenna's arms are 210±5 nm long, 85±5 nm wide and 27±3 nm thick. Fewer than 1 in 5000 nano-antennas were lost in fabrication, resulting in a highly uniform metasurface. SEM, scanning electron microscope.

The inhomogeneous plasmonic nano-antenna array is fabricated on a transparent substrate, consisting of a thin (23 nm) ITO layer on glass. The ITO layer does not affect the optical properties of the device, but serves as a charge dissipation layer during electron beam lithography. Electron beam lithography is performed using a 30 keV Raith PIONEER system and a positive resist bilayer. Metal deposition and resist removal follow standard lift-off procedures, although it should be noted that no binding layer between the gold and ITO layers is necessary. The deposited gold layer was measured to be 27±3 nm thick. Scanning electron microscope images of the fabricated sample (Figure 2c) show a very uniform, rotationally symmetric metasurface. The nano-antenna array is locally uniform with an approximate lattice constant of 375 nm. This results in the exceptionally small central singularity given by the diameter of the innermost ring (750 nm), significantly smaller than that with conventional liquid crystal technologies (50 μm).

Results and discussion

We confirm OAM state generation by transmission measurements of circularly polarised light at 780 nm. We isolate the converted part of the optical beam, which has opposite circular polarisation to any unconverted light, by a quarter-wave plate and a polariser. Figure 3a shows the intensity distribution of the converted optical beam. The preservation of the doughnut shape in both the near- and far-field confirms the existence of an optical vortex at the origin, where the singular point is stable throughout propagation. The multiple concentric rings are due to the excitation of higher order radial modes, which has been studied in detail elsewhere.22 Interference patterns between the converted light and either planar or spherical waves are imaged onto a charge coupled device (CCD) camera to determine the OAM value of the converted beam (Figure 3b) showing a double pitch-fork and double helix, respectively. The former confirms that the converted beam carries an OAM value of 2ħ, based on the number of branches stemming from the singularity. Switching the incident polarisation from left-circular to right-circular does not change the output intensity pattern, but rather the OAM sign, changing the twisting direction of the helical wave-front and flipping the orientation of the fork fringes accordingly. We repeated the experiment for several wavelengths from 760 nm to 780 nm, confirming broadband performance with efficiency increasing from 0.1% to 3% with increasing wavelength. This trend is consistent with, but approximately half of the conversion efficiency estimated by the simulations in Figure 2b. Efficiencies as large as 20% are predicted by the simulations at slightly longer wavelengths (850 nm) and could be improved by refinements to the design and fabrication of the nano-antennas.

Figure 3
figure 3

Intensity distribution and observed interference of the beam generated by the metasurface. (a) The intensity distribution of the converted component of the transmitted light. Upper and lower insets show the intensity at the far and near-field of the sample, respectively. The central null field at the origin results from the phase singularity. (b) The interference pattern of the generated beams with planar and spherical waves, respectively. The left and right insets correspond to left and right circularly polarised input beams. The number of branches of the fork fringes and lobes of the helices reveal that the transmitted beams possess OAM of =+2 and =−2, respectively. OAM, orbital angular momentum.

This demonstrates that a metasurface with q=1 induces OAM of ±2 on the converted beam, but the operating principle can be generalised to produce any integer value of OAM. The nano-antennas' arrangement provides the array with a well-defined integer or half-integer q. Based on the Pancharatnam–Berry phase, such a device introduces OAM of value ±2q to the outgoing beam. However, as such an array is not cylindrically symmetric, there will also be an exchange of angular momentum |2q−1|ħ per photon between the array and the incident light.

Conclusions

In conclusion, we have demonstrated optical spin-to-orbit conversion at visible wavelengths in an ultrathin metasurface, consisting of a space-variant array of gold nano-antennas. This device is capable of generating light carrying OAM from light initially carrying only SAM, operating on the principle of the Pancharatnam–Berry phase. The metasurface is designed to possess a topological charge of one, thus introducing a space-variant optical phase onto the beam and giving it an OAM value of two, with the sign depending on the input polarisation state. This scheme provides a novel way to generate OAM in optical beams in the visible wavelength range, using ultrathin metamaterials suitable for integrated photonics. These ultrathin devices will allow a range of existing photonics technologies to be enhanced with OAM-based functionality,23,24 including spectroscopic and imaging applications for medical diagnostics,25 chemical analysis and astronomy;26 greater information encoding on individual photons in quantum communication systems,27 ultrasensitive devices28 and potentially even inducing OAM on ultrashort pulses that otherwise would be disassociated by birefringent materials with even wavelength-order thickness.29

Author contributions

EK conceived the idea; IDL and HQ performed the structure's design and numerical analysis; SAS fabricated the sample; EK, JU and IDL performed the experiment; EK analyzed the data; RWB supervised all aspects of the project. All authors contributed to the text of the manuscript.