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    Vol. 13 Issue 11 2024

      News & Views

    • Xin Wen,Zixian Hu,Heng Wang,Yu Chen,Qichang Ma,Guixin Li
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2419-2420(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01578-z
      Abstract:Quasicrystal metasurfaces, a kind of two-dimensional artificial optical materials with subwavelength meta-atoms arranged in quasi-periodic tiling schemes, have attracted extensive attentions due to their novel optical properties. In a recent work, a dual-functional quasicrystal metasurface, which can be used to simultaneously generate the diffraction pattern and holographic image, is experimentally demonstrated. The proposed method expands the manipulation dimensions for multi-functional quasicrystal metasurfaces and may have important applications in microscopy, optical information processing, optical encryption, etc.  
        
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    • Till Stephan,Peter Ilgen,Stefan Jakobs
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2421-2423(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01582-3
      Abstract:The study of mitochondria is a formidable challenge for super-resolution microscopy due to their dynamic nature and complex membrane architecture. In this issue, Ren et al. introduce HBmito Crimson, a fluorogenic and photostable mitochondrial probe for STED microscopy and investigate how mitochondrial dynamics influence the spatial organization of mitochondrial DNA.  
        
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    • Ruizhe Zhao,Lingling Huang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2424-2426(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01592-1
      Abstract:Metasurfaces have facilitated numerous innovative applications in the scope of nonlinear optics. However, dynamically tuning the nonlinear response at the pixel level is very challenging. Recent work proposed a novel method to electrically manipulate the local amplitude and phase of third-harmonics generation (THG) by integrating the giant nonlinear responses resulting from intersubband transitions of multiple quantum wells (MQW) with plasmonic nano-resonator. The demonstrated method may pave the way to realize nonlinear optical elements with versatile functionalities by electrically tuning and promoting the advancements of innovative applications such as lidar, 3D displays, optical encryption, optical computing, and so on.  
        
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    • Dangyuan Lei,Dong Su,Stefan A. Maier
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2427-2430(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01594-z
        
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    • Junjie Du
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2431-2433(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01595-y
      Abstract:A simple cavity-based technology capable of simultaneously measuring optical rotary dispersion and circular dichroism within milliseconds offers ultra-high sensitivity and unprecedented spectral resolution. This advancement holds significant potential for various biochemical applications, including drug development, clinical diagnosis, and food science and safety.  
        
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    • Andrey Pryamikov
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2434-2435(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01599-8
      Abstract:The backpropagation algorithm, the most widely used algorithm for training artificial neural networks, can be effectively applied to the development of digital signal processing schemes in the optical fiber transmission systems. Digital signal processing as a deep learning framework can lead to a new highly efficient paradigm for cost-effective digital signal processing designes with low complexity.  
        
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    • Wenjie Wan,Xiaoshun Jiang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2436-2437(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01577-0
      Abstract:Parity-Time (PT) symmetry is an emerging concept in quantum mechanics where non-Hermitian Hamiltonians can exhibit real eigenvalues. Now, PT symmetric optical microresonators have been demonstrated to break the bandwidth-efficiency limit for nonlinear optical signal processing.  
        
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    • Fei Ding
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2438-2440(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01593-0
      Abstract:Developing a bright, deterministic source of entangled photon pairs has been an outstanding scientific and technological challenge. Semiconductor quantum dots are a promising candidate for this task. A new device combining a circular Bragg resonator and a piezoelectric actuator achieves high brightness and entanglement fidelity simultaneously, overcoming previous limitations. This breakthrough enhances quantum dot applications in entanglement-based quantum communication protocols.  
        
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    • Hang Chen
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2441-2442(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01625-9
      Abstract:A novel non-volatile photonic-electronic memory, 3D integrating an Al-doped HfO2 ferroelectric thin film onto a silicon photonic platform using fully compatible electronic and photonic fabrication processes, enables electrically/optically programmable, non-destructively readable, and multi-level storage functions.  
        
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    • Christopher Perrella,Kishan Dholakia
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2443-2445(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01626-8
      Abstract:An original form of photonic force microscope has been developed. Operating with a trapped lanthanide-doped crystal of nanometric dimensions, a minimum detected force of the order of 110 aN and a force sensitivity down to 1.8 fN/$ \sqrt{{\rm{Hz}}} $ have been realised. This opens up new prospects for force sensing in the physical sciences.  
        
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      Light People

    • Ji Wang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2446-2453(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01616-w
      Abstract:As early as about 2400 years ago, Mozi (original name Mo Di, Latinized as Micius), an ancient Chinese scientist, proposed the theory of pinhole imaging that demonstrates the fundamental principle of light behavior. About 700 years ago, Marco Polo, an Italian explorer, traveled to China along the Silk Road, marveled at the economic prosperity and the advanced technology of Hangzhou City in China, and described Hangzhou as "the most beautiful and splendid city in the world". About 5 years ago, with the support of the China-proposed Belt-and-Road Initiative, it was in Hangzhou City that Professor Pavlos Savvidis, an Armenian-born Greek physicist, chose to work with more of his Chinese counterparts and took on the challenge of building a new research laboratory on quantum optoelectronics. He used to study and work in the UK, the USA, and Greece, but now in New China's first new type of research university supported by the society—Westlake University. Traveling from West to East, traversing from one civilization to another, Professor Pavlos Savvidis delves into his unwavering quest for light in this issue of "Light People", and discusses his tireless pursuit of excellence in the field of optoelectronics, which has garnered him widespread citation, recognition, and contribution to the global scientific community.  
        
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      Reviews

    • Simone Lamon,Haoyi Yu,Qiming Zhang,Min Gu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2454-2488(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01547-6
      Abstract:Energy-intensive technologies and high-precision research require energy-efficient techniques and materials. Lens-based optical microscopy technology is useful for low-energy applications in the life sciences and other fields of technology, but standard techniques cannot achieve applications at the nanoscale because of light diffraction. Far-field super-resolution techniques have broken beyond the light diffraction limit, enabling 3D applications down to the molecular scale and striving to reduce energy use. Typically targeted super-resolution techniques have achieved high resolution, but the high light intensity needed to outperform competing optical transitions in nanomaterials may result in photo-damage and high energy consumption. Great efforts have been made in the development of nanomaterials to improve the resolution and efficiency of these techniques toward low-energy super-resolution applications. Lanthanide ion-doped upconversion nanoparticles that exhibit multiple long-lived excited energy states and emit upconversion luminescence have enabled the development of targeted super-resolution techniques that need low-intensity light. The use of lanthanide ion-doped upconversion nanoparticles in these techniques for emerging low-energy super-resolution applications will have a significant impact on life sciences and other areas of technology. In this review, we describe the dynamics of lanthanide ion-doped upconversion nanoparticles for super-resolution under low-intensity light and their use in targeted super-resolution techniques. We highlight low-energy super-resolution applications of lanthanide ion-doped upconversion nanoparticles, as well as the related research directions and challenges. Our aim is to analyze targeted super-resolution techniques using lanthanide ion-doped upconversion nanoparticles, emphasizing fundamental mechanisms governing transitions in lanthanide ions to surpass the diffraction limit with low-intensity light, and exploring their implications for low-energy nanoscale applications.  
        
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    • Cancheng Jiang,Lanyue He,Qingdong Xuan,Yuan Liao,Jian-Guo Dai,Dangyuan Lei
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2489-2510(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01560-9
      Abstract:Thermochromic coatings hold promise in reducing building energy consumption by dynamically regulating the heat gain of windows, which are often regarded as less energy-efficient components, across different seasons. Vanadium dioxide (VO2) stands out as a versatile thermochromic material for smart windows owing to its reversible metal-to-insulator transition (MIT) alongside correlated structural and optical properties. In this review, we delve into recent advancements in the phase-change VO2-based thermochromic coatings for smart windows, spanning from the macroscopic crystal level to the microscopic structural level (including elemental doping and micro/nano-engineering), as well as advances in controllable fabrication. It is notable that hybridizing functional elements/materials (e.g., W, Mo/SiO2, TiN) with VO2 in delicate structural designs (e.g., core-shell, optical cavity) brings new degrees of freedom for controlling the thermochromic properties, including the MIT temperature, luminous transmittance, solar-energy modulation ability and building-relevant multi-functionality. Additionally, we provide an overview of alternative chromogenic materials that could potentially complement or surpass the intrinsic limitations of VO2. By examining the landscape of emerging materials, we aim to broaden the scope of possibilities for smart window technologies. We also offer insights into the current challenges and prospects of VO2-based thermochromic smart windows, presenting a roadmap for advancing this field towards enhanced energy efficiency and sustainable building design. In summary, this review innovatively categorizes doping strategies and corresponding effects of VO2, underscores their crucial NIR-energy modulation ability for smart windows, pioneers a theoretical analysis of inverse core-shell structures, prioritizes practical engineering strategies for solar modulation in VO2 films, and summarizes complementary chromogenic materials, thus ultimately advancing VO2-based smart window technologies with a fresh perspective.  
        
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    • Tingzhao Fu,Jianfa Zhang,Run Sun,Yuyao Huang,Wei Xu,Sigang Yang,Zhihong Zhu,Hongwei Chen
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2511-2535(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01590-3
      Abstract:Artificial intelligence has prevailed in all trades and professions due to the assistance of big data resources, advanced algorithms, and high-performance electronic hardware. However, conventional computing hardware is inefficient at implementing complex tasks, in large part because the memory and processor in its computing architecture are separated, performing insufficiently in computing speed and energy consumption. In recent years, optical neural networks (ONNs) have made a range of research progress in optical computing due to advantages such as sub-nanosecond latency, low heat dissipation, and high parallelism. ONNs are in prospect to provide support regarding computing speed and energy consumption for the further development of artificial intelligence with a novel computing paradigm. Herein, we first introduce the design method and principle of ONNs based on various optical elements. Then, we successively review the non-integrated ONNs consisting of volume optical components and the integrated ONNs composed of on-chip components. Finally, we summarize and discuss the computational density, nonlinearity, scalability, and practical applications of ONNs, and comment on the challenges and perspectives of the ONNs in the future development trends.  
        
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      Original Articles

    • Sirazul Haque,Miguel Alexandre,António T. Vicente,Kezheng Li,Christian S. Schuster,Sui Yang,Hugo Águas,Rodrigo Martins,Rute A. S. Ferreira,Manuel J. Mendes
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2536-2548(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01559-2
      Abstract:Advanced light management techniques can enhance the sunlight absorption of perovskite solar cells (PSCs). When located at the front, they may act as a UV barrier, which is paramount for protecting the perovskite layer against UV-enabled degradation. Although it was recently shown that photonic structures such as Escher-like patterns could approach the theoretical Lambertian-limit of light trapping, it remains challenging to also implement UV protection properties for these diffractive structures while maintaining broadband absorption gains. Here, we propose a checkerboard (CB) tile pattern with designated UV photon conversion capability. Through a combined optical and electrical modeling approach, this photonic structure can increase photocurrent and power conversion efficiency in ultrathin PSCs by 25.9% and 28.2%, respectively. We further introduce a luminescent down-shifting encapsulant that converts the UV irradiation into Visible photons matching the solar cell absorption spectrum. To this end, experimentally obtained absorption and emission profiles of state-of-the-art down-shifting materials (i.e., lanthanide-based organic-inorganic hybrids) are used to predict potential gains from harnessing the UV energy. We demonstrate that at least 94% of the impinging UV radiation can be effectively converted into the Visible spectral range. Photonic protection from high-energy photons contributes to the market deployment of perovskite solar cell technology, and may become crucial for Space applications under AM0 illumination. By combining light trapping with luminescent downshifting layers, this work unravels a potential photonic solution to overcome UV degradation in PSCs while circumventing optical losses in ultrathin cells, thus improving both performance and stability.  
        
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    • Seung-Hoon Oh,Jinuk Kim,Junseo Ha,Gibeom Son,Kyungwon An
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2549-2555(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01591-2
      Abstract:Lasing threshold in the conventional lasers is the minimum input power required to initiate laser oscillation. It has been widely accepted that the conventional laser threshold occurring around a unity intracavity photon number can be eliminated in the input-output curve by making the so-called β parameter approach unity. The recent experiments, however, have revealed that even in this case the photon statistics still undergo a transition from coherent to thermal statistics when the intracavity mean photon number is decreased below unity. Since the coherent output is only available above the diminished threshold, the long-sought promise of thresholdless lasers to produce always coherent light has become questionable. Here, we present an always-coherent thresholdless laser based on superradiance by two-level atoms in a quantum superposition state with the same phase traversing a high-Q cavity. Superradiant lasing was observed without the conventional lasing threshold around the unity photon number and the photon statistics remained near coherent even below it. The coherence was improved by reducing the coupling constant as well as the excited-state amplitude in the superposition state. Our results pave a way toward always-coherent thresholdless lasers with more practical media such as quantum dots, nitrogen-vacancy centers and doped ions in crystals.  
        
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    • Zhexuan Cao,Ning Li,Laiyu Zhu,Jiamin Wu,Qionghai Dai,Hui Qiao
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2556-2565(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01609-9
      Abstract:Depth sensing plays a crucial role in various applications, including robotics, augmented reality, and autonomous driving. Monocular passive depth sensing techniques have come into their own for the cost-effectiveness and compact design, offering an alternative to the expensive and bulky active depth sensors and stereo vision systems. While the light-field camera can address the defocus ambiguity inherent in 2D cameras and achieve unambiguous depth perception, it compromises the spatial resolution and usually struggles with the effect of optical aberration. In contrast, our previously proposed meta-imaging sensor1 has overcome such hurdles by reconciling the spatial-angular resolution trade-off and achieving the multi-site aberration correction for high-resolution imaging. Here, we present a compact meta-imaging camera and an analytical framework for the quantification of monocular depth sensing precision by calculating the Cramér–Rao lower bound of depth estimation. Quantitative evaluations reveal that the meta-imaging camera exhibits not only higher precision over a broader depth range than the light-field camera but also superior robustness against changes in signal-background ratio. Moreover, both the simulation and experimental results demonstrate that the meta-imaging camera maintains the capability of providing precise depth information even in the presence of aberrations. Showing the promising compatibility with other point-spread-function engineering methods, we anticipate that the meta-imaging camera may facilitate the advancement of monocular passive depth sensing in various applications.  
        
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    • Youyan Lu,Liyun Liu,Ruoqian Gao,Ying Xiong,Peiqing Sun,Zhanghao Wu,Kai Wu,Tong Yu,Kai Zhang,Cheng Zhang,Tarik Bourouina,Xiaofeng Li,Xiaoyi Liu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2566-2575(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01572-5
      Abstract:Pyroelectric (PE) detection technologies have attracted extensive attention due to the cooling-free, bias-free, and broadband properties. However, the PE signals are generated by the continuous energy conversion processes from light, heat, to electricity, normally leading to very slow response speeds. Herein, we design and fabricate a PE detector which shows extremely fast response in near-infrared (NIR) band by combining with the inhomogeneous plasmonic metasurface. The plasmonic effect dramatically accelerates the light-heat conversion process, unprecedentedly improving the NIR response speed by 2−4 orders of magnitude to 22 μs, faster than any reported infrared (IR) PE detector. We also innovatively introduce the concept of time resolution into the field of PE detection, which represents the detector's ability to distinguish multiple fast-moving targets. Furthermore, the spatially inhomogeneous design overcomes the traditional narrowband constraint of plasmonic systems and thus ensures a wideband response from visible to NIR. This study provides a promising approach to develop next-generation IR PE detectors with ultrafast and broadband responses.  
        
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    • Sang Ho Suk,Sanghee Nah,Muhammad Sajjad,Sung Bok Seo,Jianxiang Chen,Sangwan Sim
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2576-2588(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01585-0
      Abstract:In cutting-edge optical technologies, polarization is a key for encoding and transmitting vast information, highlighting the importance of selectively switching and modulating polarized light. Recently, anisotropic two-dimensional materials have emerged for ultrafast switching of polarization-multiplexed optical signals, but face challenges with low polarization ratios and limited spectral ranges. Here, we apply strain to quasi-one-dimensional layered ZrSe3 to enhance polarization selectivity and tune operational energies in ultrafast all-optical switching. Initially, transient absorption on unstrained ZrSe3 reveals a sub-picosecond switching response in polarization along a specific crystal axis, attributed to shifting-recovery dynamics of an anisotropic exciton. However, its polarization selectivity is weakened by a slow non-excitonic response in the perpendicular polarization. To overcome this limitation, we apply strain to ZrSe3 by bending its flexible substrate. The compressive strain spectrally decouples the excitonic and non-excitonic components, doubling the polarization selectivity of the sub-picosecond switching and tripling it compared to that in the tensile-strained ZrSe3. It also effectively tunes the switching energy at a shift rate of ~93 meV %-1. This strain-tunable switching is repeatable, reversible, and robustly maintains the sub-picosecond operation. First-principles calculations reveal that the strain control is enabled by momentum- and band-dependent modulations of the electronic band structure, causing opposite shifts in the excitonic and non-excitonic transitions. Our findings offer a novel approach for high-performance, wavelength-tunable, polarization-selective ultrafast optical switching.  
        
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    • Zhou Zhou,Yiheng Zhang,Yingxin Xie,Tian Huang,Zile Li,Peng Chen,Yan-qing Lu,Shaohua Yu,Shuang Zhang,Guoxing Zheng
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2589-2598(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01608-w
      Abstract:Conventional hyperspectral cameras cascade lenses and spectrometers to acquire the spectral datacube, which forms the fundamental framework for hyperspectral imaging. However, this cascading framework involves tradeoffs among spectral and imaging performances when the system is driven toward miniaturization. Here, we propose a spectral singlet lens that unifies optical imaging and computational spectrometry functions, enabling the creation of minimalist, miniaturized and high-performance hyperspectral cameras. As a paradigm, we capitalize on planar liquid crystal optics to implement the proposed framework, with each liquid-crystal unit cell acting as both phase modulator and electrically tunable spectral filter. Experiments with various targets show that the resulting millimeter-scale hyperspectral camera exhibits both high spectral fidelity (> 95%) and high spatial resolutions (~1.7 times the diffraction limit). The proposed "two-in-one" framework can resolve the conflicts between spectral and imaging resolutions, which paves a practical pathway for advancing hyperspectral imaging systems toward miniaturization and portable applications.  
        
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    • Ze Zheng,Daria Smirnova,Gabriel Sanderson,Ying Cuifeng,Demosthenes C. Koutsogeorgis,Lujun Huang,Zixi Liu,Rupert Oulton,Arman Yousefi,Andrey E. Miroshnichenko,Dragomir N. Neshev,Mary O'Neill,Mohsen Rahmani,Lei Xu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2599-2610(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01535-w
      Abstract:Nonlinear metasurfaces have experienced rapid growth recently due to their potential in various applications, including infrared imaging and spectroscopy. However, due to the low conversion efficiencies of metasurfaces, several strategies have been adopted to enhance their performances, including employing resonances at signal or nonlinear emission wavelengths. This strategy results in a narrow operational band of the nonlinear metasurfaces, which has bottlenecked many applications, including nonlinear holography, image encoding, and nonlinear metalenses. Here, we overcome this issue by introducing a new nonlinear imaging platform utilizing a pump beam to enhance signal conversion through four-wave mixing (FWM), whereby the metasurface is resonant at the pump wavelength rather than the signal or nonlinear emissions. As a result, we demonstrate broadband nonlinear imaging for arbitrary objects using metasurfaces. A silicon disk-on-slab metasurface is introduced with an excitable guided-mode resonance at the pump wavelength. This enabled direct conversion of a broad IR image ranging from > 1000 to 4000 nm into visible. Importantly, adopting FWM substantially reduces the dependence on high-power signal inputs or resonant features at the signal beam of nonlinear imaging by utilizing the quadratic relationship between the pump beam intensity and the signal conversion efficiency. Our results, therefore, unlock the potential for broadband infrared imaging capabilities with metasurfaces, making a promising advancement for next-generation all-optical infrared imaging techniques with chip-scale photonic devices.  
        
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    • Xiaokai Li,Xiwang Liu,Chuncheng Wang,Shuai Ben,Shengpeng Zhou,Yizhang Yang,Xiaohong Song,Jing Chen,Weifeng Yang,Dajun Ding
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2611-2619(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01600-4
      Abstract:Angular streaking technique employs a close-to-circularly polarized laser pulse to build a mapping between the instant of maximum ionization and the most probable emission angle in the photoelectron momentum distribution, thereby enabling the probe of laser-induced electron dynamics in atoms and molecules with attosecond temporal resolution. Here, through the jointed experimental observations and improved Coulomb-corrected strong-field approximation statistical simulations, we identify that electrons emitted at different initial ionization times converge to the most probable emission angle due to the previously-unexpected Coulomb focusing triggered by the nonadiabatic laser-induced electron tunneling. We reveal that the Coulomb focusing induces the observed nonintuitive energy-dependent trend in the angular streaking measurements on the nonadiabatic tunneling, and that tunneling dynamics under the classically forbidden barrier can leave fingerprints on the resulting signals. Our findings have significant implications for the decoding of the intricate tunneling dynamics with attosecond angular streaking.  
        
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    • Futai Hu,Abhinav Kumar Vinod,Wenting Wang,Hsiao-Hsuan Chin,James F. McMillan,Ziyu Zhan,Yuan Meng,Mali Gong,Chee Wei Wong
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2620-2633(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01573-4
      Abstract:Solitons, the distinct balance between nonlinearity and dispersion, provide a route toward ultrafast electromagnetic pulse shaping, high-harmonic generation, real-time image processing, and RF photonic communications. Here we uniquely explore and observe the spatio-temporal breather dynamics of optical soliton crystals in frequency microcombs, examining spatial breathers, chaos transitions, and dynamical deterministic switching – in nonlinear measurements and theory. To understand the breather solitons, we describe their dynamical routes and two example transitional maps of the ensemble spatial breathers, with and without chaos initiation. We elucidate the physical mechanisms of the breather dynamics in the soliton crystal microcombs, in the interaction plane limit cycles and in the domain-wall understanding with parity symmetry breaking from third-order dispersion. We present maps of the accessible nonlinear regions, the breather frequency dependences on third-order dispersion and avoided-mode crossing strengths, and the transition between the collective breather spatio-temporal states. Our range of measurements matches well with our first-principles theory and nonlinear modeling. To image these soliton ensembles and their breathers, we further constructed panoramic temporal imaging for simultaneous fast- and slow-axis two-dimensional mapping of the breathers. In the phase-differential sampling, we present two-dimensional evolution maps of soliton crystal breathers, including with defects, in both stable breathers and breathers with drift. Our fundamental studies contribute to the understanding of nonlinear dynamics in soliton crystal complexes, their spatio-temporal dependences, and their stability-existence zones.  
        
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    • Xulong Lv,Yanjie Liang,Yi Zhang,Dongxun Chen,Xihui Shan,Xiao-Jun Wang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2634-2648(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01533-y
      Abstract:Extensive research has been conducted on visible-light and longer-wavelength infrared-light storage phosphors, which are utilized as promising rewritable memory media for optical information storage applications in dark environments. However, storage phosphors emitting in the deep ultraviolet spectral region (200–300 nm) are relatively lacking. Here, we report an appealing deep-trap ultraviolet storage phosphor, ScBO3:Bi3+, which exhibits an ultra-narrowband light emission centered at 299 nm with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of 0.21 eV and excellent X-ray energy storage capabilities. When persistently stimulated by longer-wavelength white/NIR light or heated at elevated temperatures, ScBO3:Bi3+ phosphor exhibits intense and long-lasting ultraviolet luminescence due to the interplay between defect levels and external stimulus, while the natural decay in the dark at room temperature is extremely weak after X-ray irradiation. The impact of the spectral distribution and illuminance of ambient light and ambient temperature on ultraviolet light emission has been studied by comprehensive experimental and theoretical investigations, which elucidate that both O vacancy and Sc interstitial serve as deep electron traps for enhanced and prolonged ultraviolet luminescence upon continuous optical or thermal stimulation. Based on the unique spectral features and trap distribution in ScBO3:Bi3+ phosphor, controllable optical information read-out is demonstrated via external light or heat manipulation, highlighting the great potential of ScBO3:Bi3+ phosphor for advanced optical storage application in bright environments.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Heng Jiang,Chi Chung Tsoi,Weixing Yu,Mengchao Ma,Mingjie Li,Zuankai Wang,Xuming Zhang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2649-2667(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01580-5
      Abstract:Natural selection has driven arthropods to evolve fantastic natural compound eyes (NCEs) with a unique anatomical structure, providing a promising blueprint for artificial compound eyes (ACEs) to achieve static and dynamic perceptions in complex environments. Specifically, each NCE utilises an array of ommatidia, the imaging units, distributed on a curved surface to enable abundant merits. This has inspired the development of many ACEs using various microlens arrays, but the reported ACEs have limited performances in static imaging and motion detection. Particularly, it is challenging to mimic the apposition modality to effectively transmit light rays collected by many microlenses on a curved surface to a flat imaging sensor chip while preserving their spatial relationships without interference. In this study, we integrate 271 lensed polymer optical fibres into a dome-like structure to faithfully mimic the structure of NCE. Our ACE has several parameters comparable to the NCEs: 271 ommatidia versus 272 for bark beetles, and 180° field of view (FOV) versus 150–180° FOV for most arthropods. In addition, our ACE outperforms the typical NCEs by ~100 times in dynamic response: 31.3 kHz versus 205 Hz for Glossina morsitans. Compared with other reported ACEs, our ACE enables real-time, 180° panoramic direct imaging and depth estimation within its nearly infinite depth of field. Moreover, our ACE can respond to an angular motion up to 5.6×106 deg/s with the ability to identify translation and rotation, making it suitable for applications to capture high-speed objects, such as surveillance, unmanned aerial/ground vehicles, and virtual reality.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Guoshuai Zhu,Jianyun Xiong,Xing Li,Ziyi He,Shuhan Zhong,Junlin Chen,Yang Shi,Ting Pan,Li Zhang,Baojun Li,Hongbao Xin
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2668-2679(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01617-9
      Abstract:Neural stimulation and modulation at high spatial resolution are crucial for mediating neuronal signaling and plasticity, aiding in a better understanding of neuronal dysfunction and neurodegenerative diseases. However, developing a biocompatible and precisely controllable technique for accurate and effective stimulation and modulation of neurons at the subcellular level is highly challenging. Here, we report an optomechanical method for neural stimulation and modulation with subcellular precision using optically controlled bio-darts. The bio-dart is obtained from the tip of sunflower pollen grain and can generate transient pressure on the cell membrane with submicrometer spatial resolution when propelled by optical scattering force controlled with an optical fiber probe, which results in precision neural stimulation via precisely activation of membrane mechanosensitive ion channel. Importantly, controllable modulation of a single neuronal cell, even down to subcellular neuronal structures such as dendrites, axons, and soma, can be achieved. This bio-dart can also serve as a drug delivery tool for multifunctional neural stimulation and modulation. Remarkably, our optomechanical bio-darts can also be used for in vivo neural stimulation in larval zebrafish. This strategy provides a novel approach for neural stimulation and modulation with sub-cellular precision, paving the way for high-precision neuronal plasticity and neuromodulation.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Hao Luo,Jie Luo,Zhihui Zhang,Chao Wu,Quan Li,Wei Liu,Ruwen Peng,Mu Wang,Hongqiang Li,Yun Lai
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2680-2687(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01605-z
      Abstract:Conventional dielectric solid materials, both natural and artificial, lack electromagnetic self-duality and thus require additional coatings to achieve impedance matching with free space. Here, we present a class of dielectric metamaterials that are effectively self-dual and vacuum-like, thereby exhibiting full-polarization omnidirectional impedance matching as an unusual Brewster effect extended across all incident angles and polarizations. With both birefringence and reflection eliminated regardless of wavefront and polarization, such anisotropic metamaterials could establish the electromagnetic equivalence with "stretched free space" in transformation optics, as substantiated through full-wave simulations and microwave experiments. Our findings open a practical pathway for realizing unprecedented polarization-independence and omnidirectional impedance-matching characteristics in pure dielectric solids.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Ming Zhao,Yeping Ge,Yurong Li,Xiaoyan Song,Zhiguo Xia,Xinping Zhang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2688-2698(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01607-x
      Abstract:Highly efficient inorganic phosphors are desirable for lighting-emitting diode light sources, and increasing the doping concentration of activators is a common approach for enhancing the photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY). However, the constraint of concentration quenching poses a great challenge for improving the PLQY. Herein, we propose a fundamental design principle by separating activators and prolonging their distance in Eu2+-activated Rb3Y(PO4)2 phosphors to inhibit concentration quenching, in which different quenching rates are controlled by the Eu distribution at various crystallographic sites. The blue-violet-emitting Rb3Y(PO4)2: xEu (x = 0.1%–15%) phosphors, with the occupation of Rb1, Rb2 and Y sites by Eu2+, exhibit rapid luminescence quenching with optimum external PLQY of 10% due to multi-channel energy migration. Interestingly, as the Eu concentration increases above 20%, Eu2+ prefer to occupy the Rb1 and Y sites with separated polyhedra and large interionic distances, resulting in green emission with suppressed concentration quenching, achieving an improved external PLQY of 41%. Our study provides a unique design perspective for elevating the efficiency of Eu2+-activated phosphors toward high-performance inorganic luminescent materials for full-spectrum lighting.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Hua Zhong,Victor O. Kompanets,Yiqi Zhang,Yaroslav V. Kartashov,Meng Cao,Yongdong Li,Sergei A. Zhuravitskii,Nikolay N. Skryabin,Ivan V. Dyakonov,Alexander A. Kalinkin,Sergei P. Kulik,Sergey V. Chekalin,Victor N. Zadkov
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2699-2714(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01611-1
      Abstract:Higher-order topological insulators (HOTIs) are unique materials hosting topologically protected states, whose dimensionality is at least by 2 lower than that of the bulk. Topological states in such insulators may be strongly confined in their corners which leads to considerable enhancement of nonlinear processes involving such states. However, all nonlinear HOTIs demonstrated so far were built on periodic bulk lattice materials. Here, we demonstrate the first nonlinear photonic HOTI with the fractal origin. Despite their fractional effective dimensionality, the HOTIs constructed here on two different types of the Sierpiński gasket waveguide arrays, may support topological corner states for unexpectedly wide range of coupling strengths, even in parameter regions where conventional HOTIs become trivial. We demonstrate thresholdless spatial solitons bifurcating from corner states in nonlinear fractal HOTIs and show that their localization can be efficiently controlled by the input beam power. We observe sharp differences in nonlinear light localization on outer and multiple inner corners and edges representative for these fractal materials. Our findings not only represent a new paradigm for nonlinear topological insulators, but also open new avenues for potential applications of fractal materials to control the light flow.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Xuewen Chen,Wei Lin,Xu Hu,Wenlong Wang,Zhaoheng Liang,Lin Ling,Yang Yang,Yuankai Guo,Tao Liu,Dongdan Chen,Xiaoming Wei,Zhongmin Yang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2715-2725(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01613-z
      Abstract:Ultrafast lasers have become powerful tools in various fields, and increasing their fundamental repetition rates to the gigahertz (GHz) level holds great potential for frontier scientific and industrial applications. Among various schemes, passive mode-locking in ultrashort-cavity fiber laser is promising for generating GHz ultrashort pulses (typically solitons), for its simplicity and robustness. However, its pulse energy is far lower than the critical value of the existing theory, leading to open questions on the mode-locking mechanism of GHz fiber lasers. Here, we study the passive mode-locking in GHz fiber lasers by exploring dynamic gain depletion and recovery (GDR) effect, and establish a theoretical model for comprehensively understanding its low-threshold mode-locking mechanism with multi-GHz fundamental repetition rates. Specifically, the GDR effect yields an effective interaction force and thereby binds multi-GHz solitons to form a counterpart of soliton crystals. It is found that the resulting collective behavior of the solitons effectively reduces the saturation energy of the gain fiber and permits orders of magnitude lower pulse energy for continuous-wave mode-locking (CWML). A new concept of quasi-single soliton defined in a strongly correlated length is also proposed to gain insight into the dynamics of soliton assembling, which enables the crossover from the present mode-locking theory to the existing one. Specifically, two distinguishing dynamics of Q-switched mode-locking that respectively exhibit rectangular- and Gaussian-shape envelopes are theoretically indicated and experimentally verified in the mode-locked GHz fiber laser through the measurements using both the standard real-time oscilloscope and emerging time-lens magnification. Based on the proposed criterion of CWML, we finally implement a GDR-mediated mode-locked fiber laser with an unprecedentedly high fundamental repetition rate of up to 21 GHz and a signal-to-noise ratio of 85.9 dB.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Charles Roques-Carmes,Shanhui Fan,David A. B. Miller
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2726-2733(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01622-y
      Abstract:Optical phenomena always display some degree of partial coherence between their respective degrees of freedom. Partial coherence is of particular interest in multimodal systems, where classical and quantum correlations between spatial, polarization, and spectral degrees of freedom can lead to fascinating phenomena (e.g., entanglement) and be leveraged for advanced imaging and sensing modalities (e.g., in hyperspectral, polarization, and ghost imaging). Here, we present a universal method to analyze, process, and generate spatially partially coherent light in multimode systems by using self-configuring optical networks. Our method relies on cascaded self-configuring layers whose average power outputs are sequentially optimized. Once optimized, the network separates the input light into its mutually incoherent components, which is formally equivalent to a diagonalization of the input density matrix. We illustrate our method with numerical simulations of Mach-Zehnder interferometer arrays and show how this method can be used to perform partially coherent environmental light sensing, generation of multimode partially coherent light with arbitrary coherency matrices, and unscrambling of quantum optical mixtures. We provide guidelines for the experimental realization of this method, including the influence of losses, paving the way for self-configuring photonic devices that can automatically learn optimal modal representations of partially coherent light fields.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Shin Hyung Lee,Hyo Jin Kim,Jae-Hyun Kim,Gwang Yeol Park,Sun-Kyung Kim,Sung-Min Lee
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2734-2744(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01628-6
      Abstract:While waveguide-based light concentrators offer significant advantages, their application has not been considered an interesting option for assisting multijunction or other two-terminal tandem solar cells. In this study, we present a simple yet effective approach to enhancing the output power of transfer-printed multijunction InGaP/GaAs solar cells. By utilizing a simply combinable waveguide concentrator featuring a coplanar waveguide with BaSO4 Mie scattering elements, we enable the simultaneous absorption of directly illuminated solar flux and indirectly waveguided flux. The deployment of cells is optimized for front-surface photon collection in monofacial cells. Through systematic comparisons across various waveguide parameters, supported by both experimental and theoretical quantifications, we demonstrate a remarkable improvement in the maximum output power of a 26%-efficient cell, achieving an enhancement of ~93% with the integration of the optimal scattering waveguide. Additionally, a series of supplementary tests are conducted to explore the effective waveguide size, validate enhancements in arrayed cell module performance, and assess the drawbacks associated with rear illumination. These findings provide a comprehensive understanding of our proposed approach towards advancing multi-junction photovoltaics.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Chengzhao Luo,Yanhui Ding,Zhenwei Ren,Chenglong Wu,Yonghuan Huo,Xin Zhou,Zhiyong Zheng,Xinwen Wang,Yu Chen
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2745-2755(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01601-3
      Abstract:The high pixel resolution is emerging as one of the key parameters for the next-generation displays. Despite the development of various quantum dot (QD) patterning techniques, achieving ultrahigh-resolution (> 10, 000 pixels per inch (PPI)) and high-fidelity QD patterns is still a tough challenge that needs to be addressed urgently. Here, we propose a novel and effective approach of orthogonal electric field-induced template-assisted dielectric electrophoretic deposition to successfully achieve one of the highest pixel resolutions of 23090 (PPI) with a high fidelity of up to 99%. Meanwhile, the proposed strategy is compatible with the preparation of QD pixels based on perovskite CsPbBr3 and conventional CdSe QDs, exhibiting a wide applicability for QD pixel fabrication. Notably, we further demonstrate the great value of our approach to achieve efficiently electroluminescent QD pixels with a peak external quantum efficiency of 16.5%. Consequently, this work provides a general approach for realizing ultrahigh-resolution and high-fidelity patterns based on various QDs and a novel method for fabricating QD-patterned devices with high performance.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Zhaojiang Shi,Shichao Yang,He Hu,Haodong Lei,Zhaohua Yang,Xia Yu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2756-2766(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01602-2
      Abstract:Laser-sustained plasma (LSP) source featuring high brightness and broadband spectral coverage is found to be powerful in various fields of scientific and industrial applications. However, the fundamental limit of low conversion efficiency constrains the system compactness and widespread applications of such broadband light sources. In this paper, we propose an innovative orthogonal LSP to break through the conversion efficiency limitation. Driven by the elevated conversion efficiency from absorbed laser power to ultraviolet (UV) emission, a compact broadband source (250–1650 nm) with UV spectral radiance exceeding 210 $ {mW}/({{mm}}^{2}\, \cdot\, {sr}\, \cdot\, {nm}) $ is achieved with > 100 W pump laser. With the plot of a two-dimensional refractive index model, we report an important conceptual advance that the orthogonal design eliminates the influence of the negative lensing effect on laser power density. Experimental results unambiguously demonstrate that we achieve a bright compact UV-VIS-NIR source with negligible thermal loss and the highest conversion efficiency to our knowledge. Significant enhancement of 4 dB contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) in spectral single-pixel imaging has been demonstrated using the proposed ultrabroadband source. By establishing the quantitative link between pumping optics design and plasma absorption, this work presents a compact broadband source that combines superior conversion efficiency and unprecedented brightness, which is essential to high-speed inspection and spectroscopy applications.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Mingchuan Huang,Qiankun Chen,Yang Liu,Chi Zhang,Rongjin Zhang,Junhua Yuan,Douguo Zhang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2767-2780(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01623-x
      Abstract:Single-particle tracking (SPT) is an immensely valuable technique for studying a variety of processes in the life sciences and physics. It can help researchers better understand the positions, paths, and interactions of single objects in systems that are highly dynamic or require imaging over an extended time. Here, we propose an all-dielectric one-dimensional photonic crystal (1D PC) that enhances spin-to-orbital angular momentum conversion for three-dimensional (3D) SPTs. This well-designed 1D PC can work as a substrate for optical microscopy. We introduce this effect into the interferometric scattering (iSCAT) technique, resulting in a double-helix point spread function (DH-PSF). DH-PSF provides more uniform Fisher information for 3D position estimation than the PSFs of conventional microscopy, such as encoding the axial position of a single particle in the angular orientation of DH-PSF lobes, thus providing a means for 3D SPT. This approach can address the challenge of iSCAT in 3D SPT because DH-PSF iSCAT will not experience multiple contrast inversions when a single particle travels along the axial direction. DH-PSF iSCAT microscopy was used to record the 3D trajectory of a single microbead attached to the flagellum, facilitating precise analysis of fluctuations in motor dynamics. Its ability to track single nanoparticles, such as 3D diffusion trajectories of 20 nm gold nanoparticles in glycerol solution, was also demonstrated. The DH-PSF iSCAT technique enabled by a 1D PC holds potential promise for future applications in physical, biological, and chemical science.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Yuxiang Liu,Jianghuai Yuan,Jiantao Zhou,Kewen Pan,Ran Zhang,Rongxia Zhao,Lin Li,Yihe Huang,Zhu Liu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2781-2793(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01614-y
      Abstract:Rapid synthesis of high-entropy alloy nanoparticles (HEA NPs) offers new opportunities to develop functional materials in widespread applications. Although some methods have successfully produced HEA NPs, these methods generally require rigorous conditions such as high pressure, high temperature, restricted atmosphere, and limited substrates, which impede practical viability. In this work, we report laser solid-phase synthesis of CrMnFeCoNi nanoparticles by laser irradiation of mixed metal precursors on a laser-induced graphene (LIG) support with a 3D porous structure. The CrMnFeCoNi nanoparticles are embraced by several graphene layers, forming graphene shell-encapsulated HEA nanoparticles. The mechanisms of the laser solid-phase synthesis of HEA NPs on LIG supports are investigated through theoretical simulation and experimental observations, in consideration of mixed metal precursor adsorption, thermal decomposition, reduction through electrons from laser-induced thermionic emission, and liquid beads splitting. The production rate reaches up to 30 g/h under the current laser setup. The laser-synthesized graphene shell-encapsulated CrMnFeCoNi NPs loaded on LIG-coated carbon paper are used directly as 3D binder-free integrated electrodes and exhibited excellent electrocatalytic activity towards oxygen evolution reaction with an overpotential of 293 mV at the current density of 10 mA/cm2 and exceptional stability over 428 h in alkaline media, outperforming the commercial RuO2 catalyst and the relevant catalysts reported by other methods. This work also demonstrates the versatility of this technique through the successful synthesis of CrMnFeCoNi oxide, sulfide, and phosphide nanoparticles.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Yachao Liu,Mingwei Wang,Yongqing Huang,Guo Ping Wang,Shuang Zhang
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2794-2801(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01632-w
      Abstract:Propagation properties of electromagnetic waves in an optical medium are mainly determined by the contour of equal-frequency states in $ {\boldsymbol{k}} $-space. In photonic Weyl media, the topological surface waves lead to a unique open arc of the equal-frequency contour, called the Fermi arc. However, for most realistic Weyl systems, the shape of Fermi arcs is fixed due to the constant impedance of the surrounding medium, making it difficult to manipulate the surface wave. Here we demonstrate that by adjusting the thickness of the air layer sandwiched between two photonic Weyl media, the shape of the Fermi arc can be continuously changed from convex to concave. Moreover, we show that the concave Fermi-arc waves can be used to achieve topologically protected electromagnetic pulling forces over a broad range of angles in the air layer. Our finding offers a generally applicable strategy to shape the Fermi arc in photonic Weyl media.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Guanyu Zhang,Xiaying Lyu,Yulu Qin,Yaolong Li,Zipu Fan,Xianghan Meng,Yuqing Cheng,Zini Cao,Yixuan Xu,Dong Sun,Yunan Gao,Qihuang Gong,Guowei Lyu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2802-2811(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01634-8
      Abstract:The on-chip measurement of polarization states plays an increasingly crucial role in modern sensing and imaging applications. While high-performance monolithic linearly polarized photodetectors have been extensively studied, integrated circularly polarized light (CPL) photodetectors are still hindered by inadequate discrimination capability. This study presents a broadband CPL photodetector utilizing achiral all-dielectric nanostructures, achieving an impressive discrimination ratio of ~107 at a wavelength of 405 nm. Our device shows outstanding CPL discrimination capability across the visible band without requiring intensity calibration. It functions based on the CPL-dependent near-field modes within achiral structures: under left or right CPL illumination, distinct near-field modes are excited, resulting in asymmetric irradiation of the two electrodes and generating a photovoltage with directions determined by the chirality of the incident light field. The proposed design strategy facilitates ultra-compact CPL detection across diverse materials, structures, and spectral ranges, presenting a novel avenue for achieving high-performance monolithic CPL detection.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Zhen Wang,Chunhua Tan,Meng Peng,Yiye Yu,Fang Zhong,Peng Wang,Ting He,Yang Wang,Zhenhan Zhang,Runzhang Xie,Fang Wang,Shuijin He,Peng Zhou,Weida Hu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2812-2823(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01640-w
      Abstract:Given the surpassing of the Shockley-Quiesser efficiency limit in conventional p-n junction photovoltaic effect, bulk photovoltaic effect (BPVE) has garnered significant research interest. However, the BPVE primarily focuses on a narrow wavelength range, limiting its potential applications. Here we report a giant infrared bulk photovoltaic effect in tellurene (Te) for broad-spectrum neuromodulation. The generated photocurrent in uniformly illuminated Te excludes other photoelectric effects and is attributed to the BPVE. The bulk photovoltaic wavelength in Te spans a wide range from the ultraviolet (390 nm) to the mid-infrared (3.8 µm). Moreover, the photocurrent density of 70.4 A cm−2 under infrared light simulation outperforms that in previous ultraviolet and visible semiconductors as well as infrared semimetals. Te attached to the dendrites or somata of the cortical neurons successfully elicit action potentials under broad-spectrum light irradiation. This work lays the foundation for the further development of infrared BPVE in narrow bandgap materials.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Liangliang Min,Yicheng Zhou,Haoxuan Sun,Linqi Guo,Meng Wang,Fengren Cao,Wei Tian,Liang Li
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2824-2834(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01636-6
      Abstract:Deciphering the composite information within a light field through a single photodetector, without optical and mechanical structures, is challenging. The difficulty lies in extracting multi-dimensional optical information from a single dimension of photocurrent. Emerging photodetectors based on information reconstruction have potential, yet they only extract information contained in the photoresponse current amplitude (responsivity matrix), neglecting the hidden information in response edges driven by carrier dynamics. Herein, by adjusting the thickness of the absorption layer and the interface electric field strength in the perovskite photodiode, we extend the transport and relaxation time of carriers excited by photons of different wavelengths, maximizing the spectrum richness of the edge waveform in the light-dark transition process. For the first time, without the need for extra optical and electrical components, the reconstruction of two-dimensional information of light intensity and wavelength has been achieved. With the integration of machine learning algorithms into waveform data analysis, a wide operation spectrum range of 350–750 nm is available with a 100% accuracy rate. The restoration error has been lowered to less than 0.1% for light intensity. This work offers valuable insights for advancing perovskite applications in areas such as wavelength identification and spectrum imaging.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Zhi-Gang Hu,Yi-Meng Gao,Jian-Fei Liu,Hao Yang,Min Wang,Yuechen Lei,Xin Zhou,Jincheng Li,Xuening Cao,Jinjing Liang,Chao-Qun Hu,Zhilin Li,Yong-Chang Lau,Jian-Wang Cai,Bei-Bei Li
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2835-2846(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01643-7
      Abstract:Cavity optomechanical systems have enabled precision sensing of magnetic fields, by leveraging the optical resonance-enhanced readout and mechanical resonance-enhanced response. Previous studies have successfully achieved mass-produced and reproducible microcavity optomechanical magnetometry (MCOM) by incorporating Terfenol-D thin films into high-quality (Q) factor whispering gallery mode (WGM) microcavities. However, the sensitivity was limited to 585 pT Hz−1/2, over 20 times inferior to those using Terfenol-D particles. In this work, we propose and demonstrate a high-sensitivity and mass-produced MCOM approach by sputtering a FeGaB thin film onto a high-Q SiO2 WGM microdisk. Theoretical studies are conducted to explore the magnetic actuation constant and noise-limited sensitivity by varying the parameters of the FeGaB film and SiO2 microdisk. Multiple magnetometers with different radii are fabricated and characterized. By utilizing a microdisk with a radius of 355 μm and a thickness of 1 μm, along with a FeGaB film with a radius of 330 μm and a thickness of 1.3 μm, we have achieved a remarkable peak sensitivity of 1.68 pT Hz−1/2 at 9.52 MHz. This represents a significant improvement of over two orders of magnitude compared with previous studies employing sputtered Terfenol-D film. Notably, the magnetometer operates without a bias magnetic field, thanks to the remarkable soft magnetic properties of the FeGaB film. Furthermore, as a proof of concept, we have demonstrated the real-time measurement of a pulsed magnetic field simulating the corona current in a high-voltage transmission line using our developed magnetometer. These high-sensitivity magnetometers hold great potential for various applications, such as magnetic induction tomography and corona current monitoring.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
    • Xiaodong Shi,Sakthi Sanjeev Mohanraj,Veerendra Dhyani,Angela Anna Baiju,Sihao Wang,Jiapeng Sun,Lin Zhou,Anna Paterova,Victor Leong,Di Zhu
      Vol. 13, Issue 11, Pages: 2847-2856(2024) DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01645-5
      Abstract:Integrated photon-pair sources are crucial for scalable photonic quantum systems. Thin-film lithium niobate is a promising platform for on-chip photon-pair generation through spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC). However, the device implementation faces practical challenges. Periodically poled lithium niobate (PPLN), despite enabling flexible quasi-phase matching, suffers from poor fabrication reliability and device repeatability, while conventional modal phase matching (MPM) methods yield limited efficiencies due to inadequate mode overlaps. Here, we introduce a layer-poled lithium niobate (LPLN) nanophotonic waveguide for efficient photon-pair generation. It leverages layer-wise polarity inversion through electrical poling to break spatial symmetry and significantly enhance nonlinear interactions for MPM, achieving a notable normalized second-harmonic generation (SHG) conversion efficiency of 4615% W−1cm−2. Through a cascaded SHG and SPDC process, we demonstrate photon-pair generation with a normalized brightness of 3.1 × 106 Hz nm−1 mW−2 in a 3.3 mm long LPLN waveguide, surpassing existing on-chip sources under similar operating configurations. Crucially, our LPLN waveguides offer enhanced fabrication reliability and reduced sensitivity to geometric variations and temperature fluctuations compared to PPLN devices. We expect LPLN to become a promising solution for on-chip nonlinear wavelength conversion and non-classical light generation, with immediate applications in quantum communication, networking, and on-chip photonic quantum information processing.  
        
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      Published:2024-12-05
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