Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light

Abstract The spin Hall effect of light, a transverse and spin-dependent splitting at an optical interface, generally depends on the interface properties. By contrast, the spin Hall effect of circularly polarized light is interface-independent, which aids precise nanoscale displacement control. Howev...

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Main Authors: Sangmin Shim, Kyung-Hyun Yu, Minkyung Kim, Dasol Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-12349-0
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author Sangmin Shim
Kyung-Hyun Yu
Minkyung Kim
Dasol Lee
author_facet Sangmin Shim
Kyung-Hyun Yu
Minkyung Kim
Dasol Lee
author_sort Sangmin Shim
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The spin Hall effect of light, a transverse and spin-dependent splitting at an optical interface, generally depends on the interface properties. By contrast, the spin Hall effect of circularly polarized light is interface-independent, which aids precise nanoscale displacement control. However, the spin Hall-shifted beam generally exhibits low efficiency near normal incidence, where the shift is large. The static nature of metasurfaces with in-plane anisotropy that have been proposed to address this limitation renders them unsuitable for dynamic or reconfigurable applications. In this study, we numerically demonstrated an electrically tunable metasurface that enabled binary-state switching between spin-Hall-shifted and suppressed reflection efficiencies. The metasurface comprised a grating structure and an indium tin oxide layer, whose permittivity was dynamically modulated via an electrical bias, resulting in changes in the reflection amplitude and phase, and thus, in the spin Hall efficiency. Without an applied voltage, the metasurface exhibited suppressed reflection in the spin-Hall-shifted component. By contrast, the dominance switched to spin Hall-shifted reflection upon voltage application. This approach enables the selective control of the spin-dependent reflection intensity without altering the beam displacement, thereby facilitating reconfigurable spin-optical photonic systems.
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spelling doaj-art-2bbc98d3e33e43c2a3d6c9e3e8256e892025-08-20T03:42:45ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-07-011511810.1038/s41598-025-12349-0Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized lightSangmin Shim0Kyung-Hyun Yu1Minkyung Kim2Dasol Lee3Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yonsei UniversityDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Yonsei UniversitySchool of Mechanical and Robotics Engineering, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST)Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yonsei UniversityAbstract The spin Hall effect of light, a transverse and spin-dependent splitting at an optical interface, generally depends on the interface properties. By contrast, the spin Hall effect of circularly polarized light is interface-independent, which aids precise nanoscale displacement control. However, the spin Hall-shifted beam generally exhibits low efficiency near normal incidence, where the shift is large. The static nature of metasurfaces with in-plane anisotropy that have been proposed to address this limitation renders them unsuitable for dynamic or reconfigurable applications. In this study, we numerically demonstrated an electrically tunable metasurface that enabled binary-state switching between spin-Hall-shifted and suppressed reflection efficiencies. The metasurface comprised a grating structure and an indium tin oxide layer, whose permittivity was dynamically modulated via an electrical bias, resulting in changes in the reflection amplitude and phase, and thus, in the spin Hall efficiency. Without an applied voltage, the metasurface exhibited suppressed reflection in the spin-Hall-shifted component. By contrast, the dominance switched to spin Hall-shifted reflection upon voltage application. This approach enables the selective control of the spin-dependent reflection intensity without altering the beam displacement, thereby facilitating reconfigurable spin-optical photonic systems.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-12349-0The spin Hall effect of lightPhotonic spin hall effectSwitchingMetasurfaceCircular polarization
spellingShingle Sangmin Shim
Kyung-Hyun Yu
Minkyung Kim
Dasol Lee
Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
Scientific Reports
The spin Hall effect of light
Photonic spin hall effect
Switching
Metasurface
Circular polarization
title Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
title_full Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
title_fullStr Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
title_full_unstemmed Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
title_short Numerical demonstration of a switchable binary-state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
title_sort numerical demonstration of a switchable binary state metasurface for the spin hall effect of circularly polarized light
topic The spin Hall effect of light
Photonic spin hall effect
Switching
Metasurface
Circular polarization
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-12349-0
work_keys_str_mv AT sangminshim numericaldemonstrationofaswitchablebinarystatemetasurfaceforthespinhalleffectofcircularlypolarizedlight
AT kyunghyunyu numericaldemonstrationofaswitchablebinarystatemetasurfaceforthespinhalleffectofcircularlypolarizedlight
AT minkyungkim numericaldemonstrationofaswitchablebinarystatemetasurfaceforthespinhalleffectofcircularlypolarizedlight
AT dasollee numericaldemonstrationofaswitchablebinarystatemetasurfaceforthespinhalleffectofcircularlypolarizedlight