In a striking leap for photonics, researchers have unveiled the expansive potential of bilayer and multilayer nonlocal flat optics — a technological frontier that promises to shatter the limitations of conventional flat optical devices. Unlike traditional monolayer metasurfaces, these stacked architectures introduce an additional dimension of design freedom by exploiting interlayer coupling, paving the way for ultrathin optical components with unprecedented control over light.
Flat optics has already transformed optical engineering by compressing bulky lenses and mirror systems into nanoscale patterned layers. However, until now, the optical behavior of these layers has been predominantly governed by their two-dimensional geometries, constraining the tunability of key properties such as resonance linewidth, polarization selectivity, and emission directionality. The advent of bilayer and multilayer configurations changes this paradigm fundamentally by incorporating vertical degrees of freedom — including interlayer spacing, lateral shifts, twists, and lattice mismatches.
At the heart of this breakthrough are three core mechanisms. First, near-field mode hybridization occurs when resonant electromagnetic modes in different layers interact, giving rise to new collective optical states. Second, far-field radiation interference emerges as the layers emit light into shared channels, where constructive or destructive interference can sharpen resonance quality factors or create bound states in the continuum (BICs)—long-lived modes that do not radiate despite residing within the radiation spectrum. Third, momentum selection and mixing enabled by twisted or mismatched lattices generate moiré superlattices, unlocking complex reciprocal space interactions that yield minibands, flat bands, and localized optical modes.
The simplest yet powerful design knob lies in controlling the interlayer distance in aligned bilayers. Fine-tuning this parameter adjusts both the strength of coupling and phase delay between layers, effectively modulating mode frequencies, splitting, and radiative lifetimes. Meanwhile, lateral displacement of one layer relative to the other breaks certain symmetries, converting dark states into tunable quasi-BICs and enabling asymmetric radiation profiles. This synthetic dimension offers a route to engineering unconventional radiation topologies and spatiotemporal optical vortices.
Introducing lattice mismatch or global twist further enriches the optical landscape. Moiré patterns formed by small angular rotations or lattice constant variations modulate coupling across mesoscale superlattices. These effects yield enhanced slow-light phenomena, increased density of optical states, and chiral optical responses even when individual layers lack intrinsic chirality. Locally twisted bilayers—where resonators inside unit cells rotate relative to their counterparts—support compact three-dimensional chiral structures exhibiting circular dichroism and selective polarization resonances.
Extending beyond two layers, multilayer stacks evolve into complex coupled-layer optical networks. Their intricate interference and mode hybridization pathways allow broadband spectral control, cascading of chiral effects, nonlinear phase matching, and programmable nonlinear polarization. Such versatility heralds a new era of reconfigurable and programmable photonics, as interlayer parameters can often be modulated post-fabrication through novel micro- and nano-electromechanical systems.
This emergent field faces challenges including sensitivity to gap uniformity, material losses, and fabrication precision. Overcoming these hurdles will require innovations in nanomanufacturing, feedback control, and standardized metrology. Yet, the high-dimensional design space of bilayer and multilayer nonlocal flat optics unlocks unprecedented opportunities for compact beam steering, chiral sensing, enhanced nonlinear interactions, quantum light sources, and intelligent optical devices.
By transcending the limitations of purely planar metasurface design, this research redefines ultrathin optics as a rich platform where symmetry, interference, and momentum engineering converge within coupled-layer architectures. These advances mark a critical step toward ultracompact, programmable optical technologies with profound implications for both fundamental science and practical applications.
Subject of Research: Bilayer and multilayer nonlocal flat optics in photonics
Article Title: Bilayer nonlocal flat optics
News Publication Date: Information not provided
Web References: DOI 10.1186/s43593-026-00135-y
References: Haoning Tang et al., eLight
Image Credits: Haoning Tang et al.
Tags: 3D photonic structure innovationadvanced light control technologybilayer nonlocal flat opticsbound states in the continuum (BICs)far-field radiation interferenceinterlayer coupling in photonicslayered optical resonance tuningmultilayer flat optics applicationsmultilayer metasurfacesnear-field mode hybridizationnonlocal light manipulationultrathin optical device design



