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She, Alan

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She

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Alan

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She, Alan

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    Publication
    Generation of Two-Dimensional Plasmonic Bottle Beams
    (Optical Society of America, 2013) Genevet, Patrice; Dellinger, Jean; Blanchard, Romain; She, Alan; Petit, Marlene; Cluzel, Benoit; Kats, Mikhail A; de Fornel, Frederique; Capasso, Federico
    By analogy to the three dimensional optical bottle beam, we introduce the plasmonic bottle beam: a two dimensional surface wave which features a lattice of plasmonic bottles, i.e. alternating regions of bright focii surrounded by low intensities. The two-dimensional bottle beam is created by the interference of a non-diffracting beam, a cosine-Gaussian beam, and a plane wave, thus giving rise to a non-diffracting complex intensity distribution. By controlling the propagation constant of the cosine-Gauss beam, the size and number of plasmonic bottles can be engineered. The two dimensional lattice of hot spots formed by this new plasmonic wave could have applications in plasmonic trapping.
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    High Efficiency Near Diffraction-Limited Mid-Infrared Flat Lenses Based on Metasurface Reflectarrays
    (The Optical Society, 2016) Zhang, Shuyan; Kim, Myoung-Hwan; Aieta, Francesco; She, Alan; Mansuripur, Tobias; Gabay, Ilan; Khorasaninejad, Mohammadreza; Rousso, David; Wang, Xiaojun; Troccoli, Mariano; Yu, Nanfang; Capasso, Federico
    A limiting factor in the development of mid-infrared optics is the lack of abundant materials that are transparent, low cost, lightweight, and easy to machine. In this paper, we demonstrate a metasurface device that circumvents these limitations. A flat lens based on antenna reflectarrays was designed to achieve near diffraction-limited focusing with a high efficiency (experiment: 80%; simulation: 83%) at 45o incidence angle at λ = 4.6 μm. This geometry considerably simplifies the experimental arrangement compared to the common geometry of normal incidence which requires beam splitters. Simulations show that the effect of comatic aberrations is small compared to parabolic mirrors. The use of single-step photolithography allows large scale fabrication.