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Showing posts with label plasmonics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plasmonics. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Abstract-Dynamic Terahertz Plasmonics Enabled by Phase‐Change Materials
Young‐Gyun Jeong, Young‐Mi Bahk, Dai‐Sik Kim,
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adom.201900548
Phase‐change phenomena have been an attractive research theme for decades due to the dynamic transition of material properties providing extraordinary capabilities for versatile optical device applications. Even at the terahertz (THz) frequency regime, phase‐change materials (PCMs) promote the development of dynamic devices, especially when combined with a plasmonic approach delivering strong field enhancement and localization. According to the design of plasmonic metamaterials or hybrid composites, PCMs can actively modulate the electromagnetic properties of THz waves through thermal, electrical, and optical means. In turn, THz waves can affect the PCM properties in the nonlinear regime due to the intense field strength enhancement by plasmonic structures. Here, a few types of PCMs demonstrating promising potential in THz plasmonic applications are introduced. Starting from the best‐known transition metal oxide, vanadium dioxide (VO2), which possesses an insulator‐to‐metal phase transition near room temperature, superconductors, chalcogenides, ferroelectrics, liquid crystals, and liquid metals are covered along with their phase‐change properties and the control mechanisms infused with THz plasmonic applications. The corresponding recent progress presenting how PCMs combined with plasmonic structures can demonstrate effective THz modulation is reviewed. This general overview may provide a better understanding of dynamic THz plasmonics and new ideas for future THz technology.
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Abstract-Confined terahertz surface waves on meta-surfaces and Goubau lines
Sven Becker, Tassilo Fip, Corey Shemelya, Marco Rahm,
https://www.spiedigitallibrary.org/conference-proceedings-of-spie/10719/107191H/Confined-terahertz-surface-waves-on-meta-surfaces-and-Goubau-lines/10.1117/12.2320602.short
Integrated circuits revolutionized electronics
long time ago and paved the way towards minimized microprocessors today. In
analogy, plasmonics aims at the creation of highly integrated optical networks
on a small chip that enable the implementation of ultra-small sensors or
optical processors. In the terahertz frequency regime, we investigate the
propagation of tightly bound pure surface waves on specifically designed
meta-surfaces. While most presented metasurfaces on a thin film in the
literature support waveguide mode propagation in the thin film substrate, whose
evanescent electromagnetic fields form the surface waves at the waveguide
boundaries, we observed pure surface waves that are not coupled to a waveguide
mode in the thin film. Such meta-surfaces are particularly advantageous for use
as surface sensors, since the surface waves carry most of their energy in the
space between the surface and air and almost no energy in the thin film
substrate. This is in strict contrast to most of the presented meta-surfaces in
literature so far, which guide a significant part of unusable energy in the
inaccessible region of the substrate. Furthermore, we study structures of
Goubau lines and meta-surfaces that combine excellent spectrally broadband
terahertz surface wave guiding with frequency-selective meta-surface areas and
meta-surface sub-wavelength resonators on a chip. In detail, we investigate the
coupling efficiency between Goubau lines and meta-surfaces.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Abstract-Plasmonic metamaterials reimagined (Conference Presentation)
Vladimir M. Shalaev
https://www.spiedigitallibrary.org/conference-proceedings-of-spie/10536/105360V/Plasmonic-metamaterials-reimagined-Conference-Presentation/10.1117/12.2292987.short?SSO=1
The fields of nanophotonics, plasmonics and optical metamaterials have enabled unprecedented ways to control the flow light at both the micro- and nanometer length scales, unfolding new optical phenomena, with a potential to reshape the existing optical technologies and create new ones. In this presentation, emerging plasmonic, metamaterial and metasurfaces concepts as well as material platforms will be discussed with the focus on practical photonic technologies for communication, quantum optics, bio-medical and energy applications.
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sunday, March 18, 2018
Abstract-Extraordinary THz Transmission with a Small Beam Spot: The Leaky Wave Mechanism
Miguel Navarro-Cía, Víctor Pacheco-Peña, Sergei A. Kuznetsov, Miguel Beruete
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adom.201701312/full
The discovery of extraordinary optical transmission (EOT) through patterned metallic foils in the late 1990s was decisive for the development of plasmonics and cleared the path to employ small apertures for a variety of interesting applications all along the electromagnetic spectrum. However, a typical drawback often found in practical EOT structures is the large size needed to obtain high transmittance peaks. Consequently, practical EOT arrays are usually illuminated using an expanded (mimicking a plane wave) beam. Here, it is shown with numerical and experimental results in the THz range that high transmittance peaks can be obtained even with a reduced illumination spot exciting a small number of holes, provided that the structure has a sufficient number of lateral holes out of the illumination spot. These results shed more light on the prominent role of leaky waves in the underlying physics of EOT and have a direct impact on potential applications.
Friday, December 29, 2017
Abstract-Tunable terahertz plasmonics sensor using doped graphene
Yi Huang, Shuncong Zhong,
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8068489/
Graphene plasmons exhibit much larger confinement and relatively long propagation distances at terahertz (THz) regime, with the advantage of being highly tunable via electrical and chemical doping. Thus, it provide a suitable alternative to noble-metal plasmons. We investigated the Otto configuration based THz-plasmonics sensor using a continuous suspended monolayer graphene (MLG) and graphene/insulator stacks (GIS) by finite element method (FEM). We revealed that a continuous suspended MLG based sensor has extremely high detection accuracy and promising prospect of application in ultrasensitive THz-plasmonics gas sensing. In addition, more layers of graphene will result in higher detection accuracy, but lower sensitivity and FOM of the sensor using GIS.
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Abstract-Terahertz excited plasmon-magnon interaction and magnetoplasmon-enhanced energy transfer within the framework of generalized spin Hamiltonian
Vyacheslav S. Gritzaenko, Dmitry I. Bazhanov, Oleg V. Farberovich
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1742-6596/903/1/012058/meta;jsessionid=1DA02BE29E69D6C4A27EFD86528EF7DF.c1.iopscience.cld.iop.org
Research into ultrafast terahertz technology attracts a significant interest nowdays in the fields of plasmonics and magnonics, since a recent progress in both fields unveils new fundamental physics and opens up new opportunities to engineering high-speed spintronic devices. However insufficient exchange of knowledge between these research fields still remains. The goal of this paper is to bridge such a gap by presenting a new theoretical approach to study magnetoplasmon-enhaced energy transfer between supported magnetic nanoparticles in the framework of generalized spin Hamiltonian (GSH) under ultrafast THz-wave excitation.
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Abstract-Impact of the Metal Adhesion Layer on the Radiation Power of Plasmonic Photoconductive Terahertz Sources
Deniz Turan, Sofia Carolina Corzo-Garcia, Nezih Tolga Yardimci, Enrique Castro-Camus, Mona Jarrahi
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10762-017-0431-9
The use of plasmonic contact electrodes in a photoconductive terahertz source offers high optical-to-terahertz conversion efficiencies. The high efficiency is because plasmonic contact electrodes concentrate a large portion of the incident optical pump beam in close proximity to the contact electrodes. By reducing the average transport path length of the photo-generated carriers from the contact electrodes, a larger number of the photocarriers drift to the terahertz radiating elements of the photoconductive source within a sub-picosecond time scale. Therefore, higher terahertz radiation power levels are achieved compared to a similar photoconductive source without plasmonic contact electrodes. Au is a preferred metal for plasmonic contact electrodes because of the strong plasmonic enhancement factors it offers at near-infrared optical wavelengths. However, it requires an adhesion layer to stick well to most III–V semiconductor substrates used in photoconductive terahertz sources. In this paper, we analyze the impact of the Au adhesion layer on the performance of plasmonic photoconductive sources fabricated on a GaAs substrate. Our analysis suggests that Cr is the most promising adhesion layer for plasmonic contact electrodes. We show that the use of a Cr adhesion layer instead of Ti, which is used in previously demonstrated plasmonic photoconductive sources, offers up to an 80% enhancement in the generated terahertz powers. We report record-high terahertz power emissions of up to 6.7 mW from plasmonic photoconductive sources with Cr/Au contacts.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Abstract-Revealing the Truth About “Trapped Rainbow” Storage of Terahertz Waves in Plasmonic Grating
- Baoshan Guo
Graded grating has been commonly used to trap the plasmonic surface waves of different frequencies, called “trapped rainbow.” The physical origin is believed that the group velocity of the surface waves is decreased to zero at the trapping point because the surface wave vector can be increased to an infinite value by the graded grating. However, this theory needs to be further modified according to our results. We demonstrated the surface terahertz (THz) waves near the cutoff frequency of a grating could not be coupled into the propagated modes, but are reflected back, which means the surface THz wave vector cannot be increased to an infinite value. Hence, the trapped rainbow is actually only a kind of reflection. Furthermore, one single deeper groove is enough to reflect most of the surface THz waves, which could be an easier way to control the reflection and transmission of the surface THz waves and realize the compact integrated slowing waveguide, band-pass filter, surface THz wave switch, and reflector.
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Abstract-Tunable THz wave absorption by graphene-assisted plasmonic metasurfaces based on metallic split ring resonators
Arash Ahmadivand, Raju Sinha, Mustafa Karabiyik, Phani Kiran Vabbina, Burak Gerislioglu, Serkan Kaya, Nezih Pala
Graphene plasmonics has been introduced as a novel platform to design various nano- and microstructures to function in a wide range of spectrum from optical to THz frequencies. Herein, we propose a tunable plasmonic metamaterial in the THz regime by using metallic (silver) concentric microscale split ring resonator arrays on a multilayer metasurface composed of silica and silicon layers. We obtained an absorption percentage of 47.9% including two strong Fano resonant dips in THz regime for the purely plasmonic metamaterial without graphene layer. Considering the data of an atomic graphene sheet (with the thickness of ~0.35 nm) in both analytical and experimental regimes obtained by prior works, we employed a graphene layer under concentric split ring resonator arrays and above the multilayer metasurface to enhance the absorption ratio in THz bandwidth. Our numerical and analytical results proved that the presence of a thin graphene layer enhances the absorption coefficient of MM to 64.35%, at the highest peak in absorption profile that corresponds to the Fano dip position. We also have shown that changing the intrinsic characteristics of graphene sheet leads to shifts in the position of Fano dips and variations in the absorption efficiency. The maximum percentage of absorption (~67%) was obtained for graphene-based MM with graphene layer with dissipative loss factor of 1477 Ω. Employing the antisymmetric feature of the split ring resonators, the proposed graphene-based metamaterial with strong polarization dependency is highly sensitive to the polarization angle of the incident THz beam.
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Abstract-Amplification of resonant field enhancement by plasmonic lattice coupling in metallic slit arrays
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep37738
Nonlinear spectroscopic investigation in the terahertz (THz) range requires significant field strength of the light fields. It is still a challenge to obtain the required field strengths in free space from table-top laser systems at sufficiently high repetition rates to enable quantitative nonlinear spectroscopy. It is well known that local enhancement of the THz field can be obtained for instance in narrow apertures in metallic films. Here we show by simulation, analytical modelling and experiment that the achievable field enhancement in a two-dimensional array of slits with micrometer dimensions in a metallic film can be increased by at least 60% compared to the enhancement in an isolated slit. The additional enhancement is obtained by optimized plasmonic coupling between the lattice modes and the resonance of the individual slits. Our results indicate a viable route to sensitive schemes for THz spectroscopy with slit arrays manufactured by standard UV photolithography, with local field strengths in the multi-ten-MV/cm range at kHz repetition rates, and tens of kV/cm at oscillator repetition rates.
Tuesday, October 25, 2016
Enhanced optical modulation depth of terahertz waves
http://materialsviews.com/enhanced-optical-modulation-depth-of-terahertz-waves/
The terahertz region of the electromagnetic spectrum (covering ~0.1 – 10 THz corresponding to wavelengths from 3 mm to 30 mm) is a hotbed of scientific and technological activity based, in part, on the unique attributes of radiation at these frequencies. This includes spectroscopic imaging with sufficient spectral and spatial resolution through materials that are opaque at other spectral ranges (e.g. microwave, infrared, or visible) and the promise of short-range high-bit-rate data transfer far beyond existing modalities. To advance beyond demonstration towards low-cost real-world applications requires continued development of devices such as modulators and phase shifters to adeptly control terahertz waves. Indeed, groups around the globe are exploring novel device concepts using metamaterials and plasmonics.

These results represent an interesting example of a multiscale device where an important performance metric is fruitfully augmented using nanoscience. It will be interesting to follow subsequent developments of this idea to see if the incident optical power could be further reduced to achieve a given modulation amplitude. One could also envision, for example, using metamaterials resonant at THz frequencies in conjunction with gold plasmonic particles to further optimize the modulation response.
Saturday, August 20, 2016
Abstract-Tailoring Infrared Refractory Plasmonic Material to Broadband Circularly Polarized Thermal Emitter
- Maowen Song, Honglin Yu, Jun Luo, Zuojun Zhang
Circularly polarized (CP) thermal emission possesses huge application value in the fields of infrared detecting and polarimetric thermal imaging; however, the naturally occurring infrared source is incoherent and unpolarized. In this paper, we designed a broadband CP source adaptive for high temperature in consideration of the collision frequency of the electrons increasing with temperature. Compared with the structure proposed before, “I”-shaped resonators based on refractory plasmonic material generate the linearly polarized (LP) emission and the dielectric quarter-wave plate enhances the degree of emitted CP by suppressing the parasitic radiation. More than 80 % right-handed circularly polarized (RCP) emissivity in wavelengths ranging from 3.28 to 4.81 μm within 706 to 884 K is theoretically achieved.
Monday, July 11, 2016
Manipulating superconducting plasma waves with terahertz light
Josephson plasma wave in a layered superconductor, parametrically amplified through a strong terahertz light pulse. Credit: Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter
http://phys.org/news/2016-07-superconducting-plasma-terahertz.html#jCp
Most systems in nature are inherently nonlinear, meaning that their response to any external excitation is not proportional to the strength of the applied stimulus. Nonlinearities are observed, for example, in macroscopic phenomena such as the flow of fluids like water and air or of currents in electronic circuits. Manipulating the nonlinear behavior is therefore inherently interesting for achieving control over several processes. An international team of researchers led by Andrea Cavalleri from the Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter at CFEL in Hamburg utilized the nonlinear interaction between a terahertz light field and a superconducting plasma wave in a high temperature cuprate superconductor to amplify the latter. This resulted in a more coherent superconductor, which is less susceptible to thermal fluctuations. Due to the non-dissipative superconducting nature of the plasma wave, the study opens up new avenues for "plasmonics", a field of science utilizing plasma waves for transmitting information. These findings are reported in the journal Nature Physics
The Josephson effect
The Josephson effect, predicted by Brian D. Josephson in 1962, consists in the tunneling of Cooper pairs across a thin, insulating junction between two superconductors. This superconductor-insulator-superconductor structure is called a Josephson junction. This theory was soon experimentally confirmed and in 1973 Josephson received the Nobel Prize in Physics, as his prediction resulted in the verification of the macroscopic quantum nature of superconductors.
The charge dynamics in Josephson junctions is governed by the Josephson equations, which state that the current associated with the tunneling Cooper pairs is proportional to the sine of the phase difference between the two superconductors. Under an applied voltage, the current oscillates at a frequency that depends on the voltage drop at the junction. The Josephson effect not only resulted in fundamental advances in physics but also in many applications including so-called SQUIDs, i.e. very sensitive magnetometers that are used to measure extremely weak magnetic fields. These are used, for instance, in medicine for mapping brain activity (magnetoencephalography). Moreover, Josephson junctions are nowadays employed as an extremely precise voltage standard, because the Josephson effect is a quantum effect that relates voltages and frequencies (or time) by a proportionality involving only fundamental constants.
Current research topics utilizing the Josephson effect include the realization of qubits for quantum computing and photonic devices in the gigahertz (GHz) and terahertz (THz) frequency regime.
Josephson plasma waves in cuprate superconductors
Layered superconductors like high-Tc cuprates – being built of alternating superconducting and insulating planes – are a nanoscale version of a stack of Josephson junctions. In these materials, superconducting transport first occurs in the copper-oxygen planes, while three-dimensional superconductivity emerges via Josephson tunneling in the direction perpendicular to the planes.
In analogy to Maxwell's equations in electrodynamics, whose temporal and spatial dependence results in electromagnetic waves, the Josephson relations result in the so-called Josephson plasma waves. The frequency of these waves falls into the THz range for cuprate materials and can therefore be observed with conventional THz spectroscopy.
The team around Andrea Cavalleri used THz radiation to probe Josephson plasma waves in barium-doped lanthanum copper oxide (La1.905Ba0.095CuO4). From the reflection of the probe pulse they could detect oscillations at about half a THz frequency. "When we irradiated the superconductor with our weak probe pulses, we could observe oscillations of the reflected field at a specific frequency, the so-called Josephson plasma frequency," says Srivats Rajasekaran, first author of the paper and postdoc at the MPSD in Hamburg.
Nonlinearities of Josephson plasma waves and parametric amplification
Since the Josephson plasma waves are governed by the Josephson relations, they are inherently nonlinear. In the current study, these Josephson plasma waves were driven into a highly nonlinear regime using an additional intense THz pump pulse with very large field strengths of up to 100 kV/cm. This was made possible by exploiting the recent advances in THz technology. In this regime, amplification of the Josephson plasma wave was observed experimentally. "The reflectivity of the sample became larger than 100% and, on top of that, the absorption coefficient became negative. These are clear indications of amplification occurring inside the material," explains Srivats Rajasekaran.
Parametric amplification in simple oscillating systems, achieved by periodically modulating some specific parameter, is a well-understood phenomenon. For instance, a child on a swing increases its oscillation amplitude by periodically raising and lowering its center of mass. An example from electronics is an LC circuit with periodically varied capacitance or inductance. Parametric amplifiers of this type have applications in the enhancement of weak signals without increasing its noise (used e.g. in radio astronomy). "When it comes to parametric amplification, a layered superconductor acts very much like an LC circuit," says Srivats Rajasekaran. "The Josephson supercurrent is like a wire connecting the plates of a capacitor – the copper oxide layers." The inductance of the supercurrent depends on the phase difference between the layers, and this phase difference varies with time and position on the plane.
"When we applied our intense pump pulse, the pump-probe response oscillated at twice the Josephson plasma frequency. This is equivalent to modulating the inductance periodically, which is required for parametric amplification," adds Srivats Rajasekaran. "This is the first time that the effect of parametric amplification by light irradiation has been demonstrated for Josephson plasma waves," declares Andrea Cavalleri, director at the MPSD in Hamburg.
Potential Applications
Amplification of Josephson plasma waves, exploiting the nonlinear Josephson relations with THz pulses, falls in the category of the previous works led by Andrea Cavalleri on layered superconductors, wherein THz light was utilized to switch off and on superconductivity between the planes and to generate superconducting solitons. In addition, this work has implications in the control of fluctuations of the superfluid. "The possibility to parametrically control the superfluid in layered superconductors might eventually provide a tool to stabilize fluctuating superconductivity, perhaps even for temperatures above the critical temperature," concludes Andrea Cavalleri.
The study was made possible by the ERC Synergy Grant "Frontiers in Quantum Materials' Control" (Q-MAC) that brings together scientists of the MPSD, Oxford University and further research institutions. The research team also involved scientists of the Brookhaven National Laboratory, the University of Bath and the National University of Singapore. The Center for Free-Electron Laser Science (CFEL) is a joint enterprise of DESY, the Max Planck Society and the University of Hamburg.

More information: S. Rajasekaran, E. Casandruc, Y. Laplace, D. Nicoletti, G. D. Gu, S. R. Clark, D. Jaksch, and A. Cavalleri, "Parametric Amplification of a Superconducting Plasma Wave," Nature Physics, Advance Online Publication, (July 11, 2016), DOI: 10.1038/nphys3819
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Abstract-Salient Features of Deeply Subwavelength Guiding of Terahertz Radiation in Graphene-Coated Fibers
Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, United States
ACS Photonics, Article ASAP
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.5b00503
Publication Date (Web): April 15, 2016
Copyright © 2016 American Chemical Society
*E-mail: davoyan@seas.upenn.edu., *E-mail: engheta@ee.upenn.edu.
Abstract
Friday, July 31, 2015
OT-'Plasmonic' material could bring ultrafast all-optical communications
http://m.phys.org/news/2015-07-plasmonic-material-ultrafast-all-optical.html
by Emil Venere
In optical communications, laser pulses are used to transmit information along fiber-optic cables for telephone service, the Internet and cable television.
Researchers at Purdue University have shown how an optical material made of aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO) is able to modulate – or change – how much light is reflected by 40 percent while requiring less power than other "all-optical" semiconductor devices.
"Low power is important because if you want to operate very fast - and we show the potential for up to a terahertz or more - then you need low energy dissipation," said doctoral student Nathaniel Kinsey. "Otherwise, your material would heat up and melt when you start pushing it really fast. All-optical means that unlike conventional technologies we don't use any electrical signals to control the system. Both the data stream and the control signals are optical pulses."
Being able to modulate the amount of light reflected is necessary for potential industrial applications such as data transmission.
"We can engineer the film to provide either a decrease or an increase in reflection, whatever is needed for the particular application," said Kinsey, working with a team of researchers led by Alexandra Boltasseva, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Vladimir M. Shalaev, scientific director of nanophotonics at Purdue's Birck Nanotechnology Center and a distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering. "You can use either an increase or a decrease in the reflection to encode data. It just depends on what you are trying to do. This change in the reflection also results in a change in the transmission."
Findings were detailed in a research paper appearing in July in the journal Optica, published by the Optical Society of America.
The material has been shown to work in the near-infrared range of the spectrum, which is used in optical communications, and it is compatible with the complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) manufacturing process used to construct integrated circuits. Such a technology could bring devices that process high-speed optical communications.
The researchers have proposed creating an "all optical plasmonic modulator using CMOS-compatible materials," or an optical transistor.
In electronics, silicon-based transistors are critical building blocks that switch power and amplify signals. An optical transistor could perform a similar role for light instead of electricity, bringing far faster systems than now possible.
The Optica paper, featured on the cover of the journal, was authored by Kinsey, graduate students Clayton DeVault and Jongbum Kim; visiting scholar Marcello Ferrera from Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland; Shalaev and Boltasseva.
Exposing the material to a pulsing laser light causes electrons to move from one energy level called the valence band to a higher energy level called the conduction band. As the electrons move to the conduction band they leave behind "holes" in the valance band, and eventually the electrons recombine with these holes.
The switching speed of transistors is limited by how fast it takes conventional semiconductors such as silicon to complete this cycle of light to be absorbed, excite electrons, produce holes and then recombine.
"So what we would like to do is drastically speed this up," Kinsey said.
This cycle takes about 350 femtoseconds to complete in the new AZO films, which is roughly 5,000 times faster than crystalline silicon and so fleeting that light travels only about 100 microns, or roughly the thickness of a sheet of paper, in that time.
"We were surprised that it was this fast," Kinsey said.
The increase in speed could translate into devices at least 10 times faster than conventional silicon-based electronics.
The AZO films are said to be "Epsilon-near-zero," meaning the refractive index is near zero, a quality found normally in metals and new "metamaterials," which contain features, patterns or elements that enable unprecedented control of light by harnessing clouds of electrons called surface plasmons. Unlike natural materials, metamaterials are able to reduce the index of refraction to less than one or less than zero. Refraction occurs as electromagnetic waves, including light, bend when passing from one material into another. Each material has its own refraction index, which describes how much light will bend in that particular material and defines how much the speed of light slows down while passing through a material.
The pulsing laser light changes the AZO's index of refraction, which, in turn, modulates the amount of reflection and could make higher performance possible.
"If you are operating in the range where your refractive index is low then you can have an enhanced effect, so enhanced reflection change and enhanced transmission change," he said.
The researchers "doped" zinc oxide with aluminum, meaning the zinc oxide is impregnated with aluminum atoms to alter the material's optical properties. Doping the zinc oxide causes it to behave like a metal at certain wavelengths and like a dielectric at other wavelengths.
A new low-temperature fabrication process is critical to the material's properties and for its CMOS compatibility.
"For industrial applications you can't go to really high fabrication temperatures because that damages underlying material on the chip or device," Kinsey said. "An interesting thing about these materials is that by changing factors like the processing temperature you can drastically change the properties of the films. They can be metallic or they can be very much dielectric."
The AZO also makes it possible to "tune" the optical properties of metamaterials, an advance that could hasten their commercialization, Boltasseva said.
More information: Epsilon-near-zero Al-doped ZnO for ultrafast switching at telecom wavelengths, Optica, 2015.
Friday, February 13, 2015
Nanophotonics and plasmonics: a great look for the International Year of Light
Anna Demming
Publishing Editor, IOP Publishing, Bristol, UK
Anna Demming 2015 Nanotechnology 26 090201doi:10.1088/0957-4484/26/9/090201
The physics of light has seen many makeovers. It has been described as instantaneous ubiquitous impulses, a vacillating ether, leapfrogging electromagnetic fields, corpuscles and finite velocity photons, as well as some changeling phenomenon that mimics all the above. In recent decades studies of the interactions of light with nanostructures have revealed more weird and wonderful behaviour, and applications of nanophotonics research has already demonstrated promise for new devices for slowing, filtering, trapping, confining and, as highlighted in the topical review in this issue, enhancing light [1].
Biosensing stands to benefit immeasurably from the enhancement of 'Raman signals', indicators of a molecule's vibrational modes in scattered light. Raman signals offer a unique 'fingerprint' of the molecule that is an invaluable resource for identifying substances and their surrounding medium. However with low signal strength—typically 10−14 that of fluorescence signals—the devil is in the detection. Fortunately the same light that activates vibrational modes in the molecule can trigger so-called lightning rod effects and resonant electron oscillations—plasmons—in metal nanostructures nearby. These enhance the local electromagnetic field by several orders of magnitude, while charge transfer 'chemical' processes also contribute to the enhancements. The result is a detectable signal as first demonstrated by David Jeanmaire and Richard van Duyne [2]. Describing their results in 1977 they pointed out, 'The ability to obtain resonance Raman spectra with good signal-to-noise with laser powers less than 1.0 mW, reported here for the first time, opens up possibilities of surface Raman studies with relatively inexpensive laser systems.' These possibilities were neatly demonstrated 20 years later by Katrin Kneipp and colleagues at MIT and the Technical Institute in Berlin who used surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) to detect a single molecule [3].
Since then efforts to develop user-friendly SERS techniques have attracted intense research interest. One difficulty in applying the technique is that when Raman probes are attached to metal nanoparticles, the nanoparticles are prone to aggregating and the probes desorb. Ming Li and colleagues at West Virginia University and Ocean Nano Tech in the US and INRS-Énergie in Canada combatted these issues by sandwiching the Raman probe malachite green isothiocyanate between gold nanoparticles and a silica coating [4]. Their objective, as they point out in their report, was 'to develop and optimize a highly sensitive Raman probe that features high sensitivity, good water solubility and stability, low-background fluorescence, and an absence of photobleaching for biological applications.' Experiments and supporting simulations demonstrated the success of their approach.
Monica Potara and colleagues at Babes-Bolyai University in Romania embraced the tendency to aggregate by designing films of silver nanoparticle clusters coated in the biopolymer chitosan [5]. The gaps in the nanoparticle arrangements result in hotspots for extremely high electromagnetic field enhancements while the chitosan coating allows the analyte molecules to diffuse into the film and immobilize on the surface of the silver.
Yet with the inherent variations in geometry and mixing time, reproducibility in SERS is still an issue. In their review [1], Chao Wang and Chenxu Yu from Iowa State University describe the possible solutions offered by integrating SERS with microfluidics, a tool that has already proved useful for highly precise manipulation of small volumes of liquids. Despite the potential applications of the combined approaches in environmental surveillance and assay detection for DNA/RNA and living cells, the approach is not without challenges. Microfluidics systems commonly use the polymer polydimethylsiloxane which is Raman active itself and could interfere with the measured signals. Reproducible intermixing control for colloids and analytes can also be tricky. Wang and Yu describe some of the ways around these and other aspects of SERS-microfluidics, as well as the potential of using continuous flow systems. These could further improve the reproducibility and raise the demand for some sort of optical, electrical or mechanical trapping mechanism to hold samples in the detection area long enough for a signal to be collected.
Plasmonics is an area of nanophotonics that has reached a level of maturity over the past decade. As well as biosensing there are many promising potential applications in communications and photonic circuits as the papers in our 'Plasmonics in optoelectronics' special issue highlight [6]. Yet surprising characteristics in the behaviour of light in plasmonic systems continue to emerge.
By combining plasmonic nanoparticles with photonic crystals, Ali Hatef and colleagues at the University of Western Ontario in Canada and the University of Alabama in Huntsville in the US demonstrated that the absorption of the system could drop dramatically within a given frequency range in a state described as 'plasmonic electromagnetically induced-transparency' [7]. Zhihua Zhu and colleagues from Tianjin University in China, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia, Osaka University in Japan and Oklahoma State University in the US, achieved 'plasmon-induced-transparency', an analogue of electromagnetically induced transparency, by coupling dark mode and light mode resonators in a metamaterial. Moreover they achieved the effect over a broadband spectrum embracing the increasingly important terahertz frequency region of the electromagnetic spectrum with the effect [8].
In 2015 the world celebrates the International Year of Light with a diverse range of events that emphasizes the numerous guises of light that continue to attract interest. Nanotechnology is hosting a focus collection on nanophotonics that will be accepting and publishing papers throughout the year. The collection assembles results of research that continue to push the limits of our understanding and ability to control light interactions with nanomaterials, a topic that seems infinite in its scope for further investigation. As Albert Einstein is said to have commented in 1954, 'All the fifty years of conscious brooding have brought me no closer to answer the question, 'What are light quanta?' Of course today every rascal thinks he knows the answer, but he is deluding himself.'
References
- [1]
- Wang C and Yu C 2015 Analytical characterization using surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and microfluidic sampling Nanotechnology 26 092001CrossRef
- [2]
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Friday, November 28, 2014
Abstract-Terahertz Plasmonics: Good Results and Great Expectations
Otsuji, T. Shur, M.
Research Institute of Electrical Communication,, Tohoku University, Sendai, 980-8577, JAPAN
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/abstractAuthors.jsp?arnumber=6954554&sortType%3Dasc_p_Sequence%26filter%3DAND%28p_IS_Number%3A6954433%29
The terahertz (THz) range is the next frontier of electronics and optoelectronics with potential applications ranging from imaging, space communications, computing, quality control, and homeland security to biotechnology and medicine. At THz frequencies, the electron inertia becomes important, providing delay between the applied voltage and electron velocity and current. When the electron collisions with impurities and lattice vibrations are infrequent, this delay leads to oscillations of the electronic density (called plasma waves) with the transistor channels serving as resonant cavities for the plasma waves. In the collision-dominated regime, the plasma waves are overdamped but still play a role by dramatically changing the electron distribution in the device channels at THz frequencies. The resonant regime can be used to generate THz radiation. Both resonant and overdamped plasma waves enable other THz electronic devices, such as detectors, mixers, and phase shifters. Periodic (symmetrical and asymmetric) plasmonic structures are especially promising for generation and detection of THz radiation. In this article, we review the state of the art of the plasma-wave electronics for silicon, III-V, III-N, and graphene semiconductor devices and project future performance of plasma-wave THz devices.
Thursday, November 13, 2014
“Unconventional Materials and Structures for Terahertz Plasmonic Metamaterials”
http://www.ece.utah.edu/unconventional-materials-and-structures-for-terahertz-plasmonic-metamaterials/
November 13, 2014
Dr. Ajay Nahata
University of Utah
Electrical & Computer Engineering Department
Electrical & Computer Engineering Department
When: Monday, November 17, 2014 at 3:05 p.m.
Where: Warnock 1250
Where: Warnock 1250
Abstract
In recent years, there has been great interest in the field of plasmonics. Much of the focus has been on studying the phenomena at optical frequencies, because of the potential for a wide variety of nanophotonic device applications. Although there has been excellent progress in this area, any resulting plasmonic device technologies would need to compete with existing optical capabilities. This is not the case in the THz spectral range. Although significant advances has been made in creating THz sources and detectors, there is a nearly complete lack of other device capabilities in the THz spectral range, which severely limits the development of useful technologies in areas such as communications, computing and imaging. A significant issue is that conventional dielectric materials are highly lossy at these frequencies. In this talk, I will discuss why plasmonics is extremely well suited for THz applications and demonstrate that the breadth of materials appropriate for plasmonics is dramatically larger than at optical frequencies.
Speaker Biography
Dr. Ajay Nahata received his Bachelor’s degree from MIT and his Master’s and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University, all in electrical engineering. He worked in industry for a total of nearly nine years, first at AlliedSignal Inc. (now Honeywell International) and later with NEC Research Institute. Since August 2003, he has been with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Utah.
His current research programs are in the areas of THz optoelectronics and nanophotonics. His research interests include ultrafast optics, nonlinear optics, nanophotonics, and, more generally, studying interesting optical phenomena and exploring potential applications.
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