Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Graphene-based Terahertz Devices: the Wave of the Future







People use electromagnetic energy every day … watching television, listening to
the radio, popping corn with a microwave, taking an X-ray or using a cell phone. This energy travels in the form of waves, which are widely used in electronic and wireless devices. One of the hottest areas of the electromagnetic spectrum being explored today is the terahertz (THz) range. Terahertz waves, lying between microwave and optical frequencies, offer improved performance for a variety of applications in everyday life. For instance, THz waves can carry more information than radio/microwaves for communications devices. They also provide medical and biological images with higher resolution than microwaves, while offering much smaller potential harm of exposure than X-rays.
Researchers at the University of Notre Dame have shown that it is possible to
efficiently manipulate THz electromagnetic waves with atomically thin graphene layers. This achievement, which was recently published in Nature Communications, sets the stage for development of compact, efficient and cost-effective devices and systems operating in the THz band.
“A major bottleneck in the promise of THz technology has been the lack of
efficient materials and devices that manipulate these energy waves,” says Berardi Sensale- Rodriguez, a graduate student in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Notre Dame.  “Having a naturally two-dimensional material with strong and tunable response to THz waves, for example, graphene, gives us the opportunity to design THz devices achieving unprecedented performance.”
The terahertz team — graduate students Berardi Sensale-Rodriguez, Rusen Yan, Kristof Tahy and Tian Fang; research assistant professors Michelle M. Kelly [throughCenter for Nanoscience and Technology (NDnano)] and Lei Liu [in conjunction withAdvanced Diagnostics & Therapeutics (AD&T) at Notre Dame]; visiting research assistant professor Wan Sik Hwang [with Midwest Institute of Nanoelectronics Discovery (MIND)]; Associate Professor Debdeep Jena and John Cardinal O’Hara, C.S.C., Associate Professor Huili (Grace) Xing — has demonstrated the first proof of concept prototype of a graphene-based THz modulator, a device enabled solely by intraband transitions in graphene.
GXingGraphene, an atom-thick semiconductor material, has shown promising electrical, mechanical and thermal properties leading to the recent demonstration of fast transistors, flexible/transparent electronics, optical devices and now terahertz active components. “Graphene has been touted as an ideal platform to discover new, as well as prove/dispute existing, physical phenomena since 2004. That is what two physicists in the United Kingdom, Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, were awarded the Nobel Prize for in 2010,” says Xing. “However, very few real-world applications of graphene have emerged to date. Using graphene to manipulate THz waves is one of such applications.
This Nature Communication paper documented our first experimental effort to realize the predictions in our paper published in Applied Physics Letters last year. Devices with better performance continue rolling out of our laboratories.” Xing also comments, “Though Professor Jena and I formed the vision to use two-dimensional electron gas to manipulate THz waves back in 2006, it was not until Michelle, Lei and Berardi joined us that this piece of work was possible.”
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research, as well MIND, NDnano and AD&T.

For more information, contact Huili (Grace) Xing at 574-631-9108 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            574-631-9108      end_of_the_skype_highlighting or hxing@nd.edu.

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