- Controlled disorder enables multiple optical functions within a single compact device
- Mosaic metasurfaces reduce space requirements for complex light manipulation tasks
- Eleven optical functions operate simultaneously on one engineered surface
Researchers at Monash University have overturned a long-held assumption in optics by showing how controlled disorder can make optical devices more powerful.
The team developed a new class of “disordered mosaic metasurfaces” capable of performing multiple optical functions simultaneously within a single device.
Instead of carefully arranging structures in perfect order, the researchers spread them out in a mosaic-like pattern.
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How a mosaic design packs multiple functions into the same space
“Interference is usually something engineers try to eliminate,” said Dr. Haoran Ren. “But we found that if you design it carefully, suffering can actually enhance what these devices can do.”
Traditional metasurfaces face a major limitation: each device typically performs only one function.
This new approach uses an unordered “mosaic” layout of tiny light-controlling elements known as metapixels.
The researchers showed that it could drastically reduce the area required for any function and free up space for additional functions.
“Think of it as a city,” said Dr. Chi Li. “Traditional designs provide one function throughout the space. What we have done is to redesign the ‘urban planning’ so that multiple functions can coexist effectively.”
As a proof of concept, the team built a new type of optical lens that works across a wide range of wavelengths from 1200 to 1400nm.
Its device integrates 11 different optical functions into a single surface, enabling it to focus light consistently across different colors without the usual distortion.
The team also demonstrated the ability to capture detailed information about the polarization of light in a single measurement.
Previously, this kind of analysis required multiple measurements or specialized equipment – compact, multifunctional optical devices could transform the telecommunications infrastructure, making it faster and more efficient.
Biomedical diagnostics, environmental sensing, and space-based imaging would also benefit from smaller, more capable optical systems.
The platform provides researchers with a scalable way to integrate many optical functions into a single compact device.
By showing that disorder can outperform order, the research challenges a fundamental assumption across photonics.
“Sometimes the most powerful innovations come from questioning what we think we know,” said Dr. Clean.
The research was carried out at the Monash Nanophotonics Laboratory with additional contributions from the University of Exeter and the University of the Witwatersrand.
Whether this laboratory breakthrough can scale to commercial manufacturing remains an open question.
Still, the conceptual shift from perfect order to engineered disorder opens up a new direction for photonics that could ultimately deliver faster, better broadband.
Through nature
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