Abstract
Metasurfaces enable the generation of strong nonlinear signals, with nanoantenna resonances significantly enhancing the nonlinear response through tailored light-matter interactions. Commonly used nonlinear materials, such as lithium niobate and other similar crystals, have relatively moderate refractive indices, limiting their ability to achieve the strong mode localization attainable with high-refractive-index materials like silicon. Here, we report on enhancing mode confinement in nonlinear metasurfaces by employing conformal coatings of titania with atomic layer deposition (ALD). We develop a low-temperature ALD that enables the augmentation of resonances in materials that cannot withstand high-temperature processing, including polymers. We report on the design of a metasurface incorporating a nonlinear crystal and an ALD coating, achieving enhanced mode localization through this approach in the near-infrared wavelength range. We numerically demonstrate a significant enhancement in second-harmonic generation in the designed metasurface, achieved by optimizing the thickness of the ALD coating for the telecommunication wavelength.