Showing posts with label Miriam S. Vitiello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miriam S. Vitiello. Show all posts

Monday, December 7, 2020

Abstract-Terahertz Frequency Combs Exploiting an On-Chip, Solution-Processed, Graphene-Quantum Cascade Laser Coupled-Cavity

 


Francesco P. Mezzapesa,  Katia Garrasi, Johannes Schmidt, Luca Salemi, Valentino Pistore, Lianhe Li, A. Giles Davies, Edmund H. Linfield, Michael Riesch, Christian Jirauschek, Tian Carey, Felice Torrisi, Andrea C. Ferrari,  Miriam S. Vitiello

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsphotonics.0c01523#

The ability to engineer quantum-cascade-lasers (QCLs) with ultrabroad gain spectra, and with a full compensation of the group velocity dispersion, at terahertz (THz) frequencies, is key for devising monolithic and miniaturized optical frequency-comb-synthesizers (FCSs) in the far-infrared. In THz QCLs four-wave mixing, driven by intrinsic third-order susceptibility of the intersubband gain medium, self-locks the optical modes in phase, allowing stable comb operation, albeit over a restricted dynamic range (∼20% of the laser operational range). Here, we engineer miniaturized THz FCSs, comprising a heterogeneous THz QCL, integrated with a tightly coupled, on-chip, solution-processed, graphene saturable-absorber reflector that preserves phase-coherence between lasing modes, even when four-wave mixing no longer provides dispersion compensation. This enables a high-power (8 mW) FCS with over 90 optical modes, through 55% of the laser operational range. We also achieve stable injection-locking, paving the way to a number of key applications, including high-precision tunable broadband-spectroscopy and quantum-metrology.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Abstract-Unveiling the detection dynamics of semiconductor nanowire photodetectors by terahertz near-field nanoscopy

 


Eva A. A. Pogna, Mahdi Asgari, Valentina Zannier, Lucia Sorba, Leonardo Viti, Miriam S. Vitiello, 


https://www.nature.com/articles/s41377-020-00425-1

Semiconductor nanowire field-effect transistors represent a promising platform for the development of room-temperature (RT) terahertz (THz) frequency light detectors due to the strong nonlinearity of their transfer characteristics and their remarkable combination of low noise-equivalent powers (<1 nW Hz1/2) and high responsivities (>100 V/W). Nano-engineering an NW photodetector combining high sensitivity with high speed (sub-ns) in the THz regime at RT is highly desirable for many frontier applications in quantum optics and nanophotonics, but this requires a clear understanding of the origin of the photo-response. Conventional electrical and optical measurements, however, cannot unambiguously determine the dominant detection mechanism due to inherent device asymmetry that allows different processes to be simultaneously activated. Here, we innovatively capture snapshots of the photo-response of individual InAs nanowires via high spatial resolution (35 nm) THz photocurrent nanoscopy. By coupling a THz quantum cascade laser to scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) and monitoring both electrical and optical readouts, we simultaneously measure transport and scattering properties. The spatially resolved electric response provides unambiguous signatures of photo-thermoelectric and bolometric currents whose interplay is discussed as a function of photon density and material doping, therefore providing a route to engineer photo-responses by design.

Friday, August 28, 2020

Music goes terahertz: Scientists achieve breakthrough for pulsed terahertz lasers



https://www.nanowerk.com/nanotechnology-news2/newsid=56003.php
(Nanowerk News) An international research team from Germany, Italy, and the UK has developed a key photonics component for the intriguing terahertz spectral range. By mixing electronic resonances in semiconductor nanostructures with the photon field of microresonators, they designed a stained mirror that bleaches more easily than ever and could make terahertz lasers ultrafast.
The results are published in Nature Communications ("Ultrafast terahertz saturable absorbers using tailored intersubband polaritons").
A strong light pulse (white) can turn the saturable absorber (gold grating) into a nearly perfect mirror
A strong light pulse (white) can turn the saturable absorber (gold grating) into a nearly perfect mirror. Background photo: magnified view of a quantum cascade laser (center part of the silver area). (Image: Juergen Raab, Universität Regensburg)
Terahertz radiation – often dubbed T-rays – marks one of the last frontiers in photonics. Located in the spectral gap between microwave electronics and infrared optics, T-rays offer enormous application potential, but they have been expensive to generate. First broadly available terahertz applications range from body scanners at airports and rapid gas sensing to ultrafast communication.
Many more ideas could hit the market if ultrashort pulses could be directly generated in so-called quantum cascade lasers, special types of electrically driven, compact terahertz lasers. These sources typically operate in continuous wave mode, but it has been widely predicted that they might change into pulsed operation if a key photonics element was incorporated into the laser – a so-called saturable absorber.
A saturable absorber works like a foggy mirror that transiently turns clear if the incident light becomes too bright. If all the power inside a laser concentrates in a short pulse it would easily saturate the absorber and suffer less loss than a continuous wave beam.
Such elements are readily available in optics, whereas in the terahertz domain they have only existed for impracticably intense radiation, not achievable with quantum cascade lasers.
A European consortium formed by the research groups of Miriam S. Vitiello, Pisa, Edmund Linfield, Leeds, and Rupert Huber, University of Regensburg, have now joined forces to develop a new class of saturable absorbers operating at much lower saturation intensities.
Their novel idea is inspired by a strategy well-known in music: resonators. Where does a Steinway piano get its unique sound from? The secret is less in the strings than in the resonating body. This is where the exact sound is defined and its dynamical response to a forte keystroke.
“We essentially transfer this idea into terahertz optics”, says Jürgen Raab, lead author of the manuscript.
Miriam Vitiello’s group designed a microstructured assembly of a gold mirror and a gold grating that jointly work like a resonating body for terahertz radiation. These resonances can be coupled strongly with electrons that can hop between two quantum states defined by an atomically precise sequence of semiconducting nanostructures, designed and grown in the group of Edmund Linfield.
The pivot: The strong coupling between the electrons and the terahertz microcavity results in an excitation that is half electron, half terahertz photon. This situation not only shapes the “tone” of the resonance, but it also dramatically changes the way the system reacts to a “forte keystroke”, corresponding to an intense terahertz pulse.
The group put the new terahertz Steinway to its ultimate test. In a specially designed setup in Regensburg, they focused an ultrashort terahertz pulse onto the saturable absorber and developed an extreme slow-motion camera to follow its saturation dynamics on the femtosecond time scale – the millionth part of a billionth of a second.
The amazing result: The absorber was not only much easier to saturate than the electronic transition alone, by approximately an order of magnitude. It also saturates faster than a single oscillation cycle of the terahertz pulse, and the “tone” of the resonator morphs so well during the saturation process that essentially no absorption remains while the intense THz pulse is applied. These are the best possible genes of saturable absorbers.
Miriam Vitiello is convinced: “Now we have all components at hand to build ultrafast terahertz quantum cascade lasers with saturable absorbers”.
Such a source could dramatically extend the scope of terahertz photonics. Surpassing the frequency of modern computers by a staggering factor of 1000, ultrashort terahertz pulses could form the backbone of revolutionary next-generation telecommunication links. Compact quantum cascade lasers, emitting ultrashort T-rays, may allow also boost chemical analytics and enable an enormous variety of applications in diagnostics and medicine. With the current results, an important milestone towards these bold goals has been reached.

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Abstract-Ultrafast terahertz saturable absorbers using tailored intersubband polaritons


Jürgen Raab, Francesco P. Mezzapesa, Leonardo Viti, Nils Dessmann, Laura K. Diebel, Lianhe Li, A. Giles Davies, Edmund H. Linfield, Christoph Lange, Rupert Huber, Miriam S. Vitiello,

         Polaritonic saturable absorber structure.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-18004-8

Semiconductor heterostructures have enabled a great variety of applications ranging from GHz electronics to photonic quantum devices. While nonlinearities play a central role for cutting-edge functionality, they require strong field amplitudes owing to the weak light-matter coupling of electronic resonances of naturally occurring materials. Here, we ultrastrongly couple intersubband transitions of semiconductor quantum wells to the photonic mode of a metallic cavity in order to custom-tailor the population and polarization dynamics of intersubband cavity polaritons in the saturation regime. Two-dimensional THz spectroscopy reveals strong subcycle nonlinearities including six-wave mixing and a collapse of light-matter coupling within 900 fs. This collapse bleaches the absorption, at a peak intensity one order of magnitude lower than previous all-integrated approaches and well achievable by state-of-the-art QCLs, as demonstrated by a saturation of the structure under cw-excitation. We complement our data by a quantitative theory. Our results highlight a path towards passively mode-locked QCLs based on polaritonic saturable absorbers in a monolithic single-chip design.

Monday, May 4, 2020

Abstract-HBN-encapsulated, graphene-based room-temperature terahertz receivers with high speed and low noise


Leonardo VitiDavid G. PurdieAntonio LombardoAndrea C. FerrariMiriam S. Vitiello

https://arxiv.org/abs/2004.10011

Uncooled Terahertz (THz) photodetectors (PDs) showing fast (ps) response and high sensitivity (noise equivalent power (NEP) < nWHz1/2) over a broad (0.5THz-10THz) frequency range are needed for applications in high-resolution spectroscopy (relative accuracy ~ 
1011), metrology, quantum information, security, imaging, optical communications. However, present THz receivers cannot provide the required balance between sensitivity, speed, operation temperature and frequency range. Here, we demonstrate an uncooled THz PD combining the low (~2000 kBμm2) electronic specific heat of high mobility (> 50000 cm2V1s1) hBN-encapsulated graphene with the asymmetric field-enhancement produced by a bow-tie antenna resonating at 3 THz. This produces a strong photo-thermoelectric conversion, which simultaneously leads to a combination of high sensitivity (NEP  160 pWHz1/2), fast response time (3.3ns) and a four orders of magnitude dynamic range, making our devices the fastest, broadband, low noise, room temperature THz PD to date.

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Abstract-Ultrafast two-dimensional field spectroscopy of terahertz intersubband saturable absorbers


Jürgen Raab, Christoph Lange, Jessica L. Boland, Ignaz Laepple, Martin Furthmeier, Enrico Dardanis, Nils Dessmann, Lianhe Li, Edmund Linfield, A. Giles Davies, Miriam S. Vitiello, and Rupert Huber


(a) Schematic diagram of the THz saturable absorber structure showing the grating and the MQW stack. δ-Si: Silicon delta-doping layers. (b) Electron envelope functions of the first (Ψ1, red) and second (Ψ2, blue) subbands, and the conduction band edge (CB, black), in the MQW structure. (c) Cross section of the sample, showing the simulated field enhancement of the z-component Ezat 2.7 THz underneath one period of the gold grating, normalized to the incident electric field. Dashed horizontal lines indicate a GaAs layer, separating the MQW section from the metal grating. Lower panel: magnified view of the marked part of the upper panel. (d) Electric field waveform of the THz pulses used to excite the ISB system. (e) Amplitude spectrum of the THz transient shown in (d) along with the measured field transmission of the sample. The blue arrow indicates the expected ISB transition frequency. (f) Experimental principle showing the two identical THz pulses with fieldsEAandEB delayed by a time τ, which prepare and interrogate the structure’s nonlinear response.


https://www.osapublishing.org/oe/abstract.cfm?uri=oe-27-3-2248

Intersubband (ISB) transitions in semiconductor multi-quantum well (MQW) structures are promising candidates for the development of saturable absorbers at terahertz (THz) frequencies. Here, we exploit amplitude and phase-resolved two-dimensional (2D) THz spectroscopy on the sub-cycle time scale to observe directly the saturation dynamics and coherent control of ISB transitions in a metal-insulator MQW structure. Clear signatures of incoherent pump-probe and coherent four-wave mixing signals are recorded as a function of the peak electric field of the single-cycle THz pulses. All nonlinear signals reach a pronounced maximum for a THz electric field amplitude of 11 kV/cm and decrease for higher fields. We demonstrate that this behavior is a fingerprint of THz-driven carrier-wave Rabi flopping. A numerical solution of the Maxwell-Bloch equations reproduces our experimental findings quantitatively and traces the trajectory of the Bloch vector. This microscopic model allows us to design tailored MQW structures with optimized dynamical properties for saturable absorbers that could be used in future compact semiconductor-based single-cycle THz sources.
Published by The Optical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI.