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Colloquium
5 junio 2026

Hora: Desde 10:00h a 11:00h

Lugar: ICFO Auditorium

ICFO Colloquium | Tunable Active Metasurfaces for Dynamic Wavefront Control

HARRY ATWATER
California Institute of Technology

PROFILE

Harry Atwater is the Otis Booth Leadership Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science, and the Howard Hughes Professor of Applied Physics and Materials Science at the California Institute of Technology.  Atwater’s scientific effort focuses on nanophotonic light-matter interactions.  His work spans fundamental nanophotonic phenomena and applications, including active wavefront shaping of light using metasurfaces, optical propulsion of lightsails, quantum and 2D nanophotonics as well as solar energy conversion, on earth and in space.

Atwater was an early pioneer in nanophotonics and plasmonics and gave a name to the field of plasmonics in 2001.  Currently Atwater directs the Liquid Sunlight Alliance (LiSA), a Department of Energy Hub program for solar fuels, and is a PI of the Caltech Space Solar Power Project.  He was also the founding Editor in Chief of the journal ACS Photonics.   Atwater is a Member of the US National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of APS, MRS, SPIE and Optica, a Web of Science Highly Cited Researcher from 2014-2024, and is recipient of numerous awards, including the 2021 von Hippel Award of the Materials Research Society

ABSTRACT

Active metasurfaces that enable dynamic modulation of reflection and transmission amplitude, phase, and polarization, using resonantly excited materials combined with electro-optic and nonlinear active media, are powerful design elements for wavefront control. We report on the design and realization of space-time metasurfaces, and nanostructured high quality factor dielectric active metasurfaces that enable both phase and amplitude modulation. They employ electro-optic active media with incorporated driving electrodes that introduce local refractive index modifications in the active medium that couple to high Q factor resonant modes, in an externally applied electric field. We also discuss new directions for phase modulation in all-optical active metasurfaces based on very low optical power nonlinearities enabled by opto-mechanical metastructures. We compare the achievable nonlinearities to those in other nonlinear media and discuss applications in imaging and computation

** If you require an accommodation to participate in this event due to a disability, please contact the Events Team at events@icfo.eu as soon as possible.

Colloquium
5 junio 2026

Hora: Desde 10:00h a 11:00h

Lugar: ICFO Auditorium

ICFO Colloquium | Tunable Active Metasurfaces for Dynamic Wavefront Control

HARRY ATWATER
California Institute of Technology

PROFILE

Harry Atwater is the Otis Booth Leadership Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science, and the Howard Hughes Professor of Applied Physics and Materials Science at the California Institute of Technology.  Atwater’s scientific effort focuses on nanophotonic light-matter interactions.  His work spans fundamental nanophotonic phenomena and applications, including active wavefront shaping of light using metasurfaces, optical propulsion of lightsails, quantum and 2D nanophotonics as well as solar energy conversion, on earth and in space.

Atwater was an early pioneer in nanophotonics and plasmonics and gave a name to the field of plasmonics in 2001.  Currently Atwater directs the Liquid Sunlight Alliance (LiSA), a Department of Energy Hub program for solar fuels, and is a PI of the Caltech Space Solar Power Project.  He was also the founding Editor in Chief of the journal ACS Photonics.   Atwater is a Member of the US National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of APS, MRS, SPIE and Optica, a Web of Science Highly Cited Researcher from 2014-2024, and is recipient of numerous awards, including the 2021 von Hippel Award of the Materials Research Society

ABSTRACT

Active metasurfaces that enable dynamic modulation of reflection and transmission amplitude, phase, and polarization, using resonantly excited materials combined with electro-optic and nonlinear active media, are powerful design elements for wavefront control. We report on the design and realization of space-time metasurfaces, and nanostructured high quality factor dielectric active metasurfaces that enable both phase and amplitude modulation. They employ electro-optic active media with incorporated driving electrodes that introduce local refractive index modifications in the active medium that couple to high Q factor resonant modes, in an externally applied electric field. We also discuss new directions for phase modulation in all-optical active metasurfaces based on very low optical power nonlinearities enabled by opto-mechanical metastructures. We compare the achievable nonlinearities to those in other nonlinear media and discuss applications in imaging and computation

** If you require an accommodation to participate in this event due to a disability, please contact the Events Team at events@icfo.eu as soon as possible.

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