Researchers Unveil Electrically Tunable Optical Metasurfaces Leveraging Monolayer Semiconductors
A groundbreaking study has revealed a novel approach to actively controlling light through hybrid metasurfaces integrated with atomically thin semiconductors. By exploiting the unique excitonic properties of a tungsten diselenide (WSe2) monolayer positioned atop a quasi-bound state in the continuum (q-BIC) metasurface, scientists have demonstrated unprecedented modulation of optical reflectance at room temperature.
Central to this innovation is a semi-empirical model describing the two-dimensional (2D) optical conductivity of the WSe2 monolayer. The model captures the complex interplay between electronic transitions and exciton resonances via a Lorentz oscillator formalism, enabling precise tuning of the material’s dielectric response as external voltage adjusts the Fermi level. This tunability modulates the neutral A0-exciton oscillator strength, causing pronounced shifts in absorption and reflection spectra.
The hybrid structure design strategically aligns the q-BIC resonance with the excitonic resonance of the WSe2 monolayer, enhancing light-matter interaction. The conductivity tensor is approximated as diagonal—consistent with the isotropic in-plane response and vanishing out-of-plane components—simplifying the treatment of the monolayer as an effective 2D material despite its atomic thickness.
Modeling reveals that applying negative voltage restores the neutral exciton population by shifting the Fermi energy toward mid-gap, thereby increasing excitonic absorption and reducing reflectance. Conversely, larger voltage shifts induce charged trion states (A+ or A–), characterized by lower oscillator strength and broader spectral features. This delicate balance between excitonic states underpins the tunability of optical properties observed.
Experimental and numerical data corroborate a modulation depth in reflectance approaching 50% within the exciton spectral region when the q-BIC mode is excited. This is a substantial enhancement compared to just 5% modulation off resonance, highlighting the critical role of engineered photonic states in amplifying control over light. The metasurface resonance quality factor intimately influences this effect, with higher Q-factors yielding stronger modulation.
Crucially, the study’s results extend beyond isolated monolayers. Unlike standalone WSe2 heterostructures that exhibit minimal modulation at room temperature, the hybrid metasurface platform amplifies reflectance modulation by a factor of approximately 15. These findings suggest promising avenues for developing actively tunable optical devices leveraging ultrathin semiconductor layers integrated with resonant nanostructures.
The implications for photonics are profound. By harnessing electrically controlled excitonic dynamics within 2D materials coupled to high-Q metasurfaces, researchers open new pathways for ultrafast optoelectronic modulators, sensors, and adaptive optical components. This technology holds potential for integration into compact photonic circuits, advancing the frontier of dynamic light manipulation at the nanoscale.
Future enhancements may emerge by combining this approach with higher Q-factor resonances and cryogenic operation, which could further narrow excitonic linewidths and boost modulation contrast. Continued theoretical and experimental efforts will be essential to refine quantitative models of charge doping and Fermi level shifts under complex gating conditions.
This pioneering work establishes a robust formalism that bridges advanced materials science and nanophotonics, setting a stage for tunable photonic devices grounded on fundamentally quantum mechanical excitations within atomically thin semiconductors.
Subject of Research: Nanophotonics and 2D semiconductor materials
Article References:
Ustinov, A., Barreda, Á., Choi, DY. et al. Tunable resonant metasurfaces enabled by atomically thin semiconductors.
Light Sci Appl 15, 311 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-026-02311-8
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: 10 July 2026
