| Literature DB >> 22163939 |
Alexander Benz1, Christoph Deutsch, Martin Brandstetter, Aaron M Andrews, Pavel Klang, Hermann Detz, Werner Schrenk, Gottfried Strasser, Karl Unterrainer.
Abstract
The terahertz (THz) spectral region, covering frequencies from 1 to 10 THz, is highly interesting for chemical sensing. The energy of rotational and vibrational transitions of molecules lies within this frequency range. Therefore, chemical fingerprints can be derived, allowing for a simple detection scheme. Here, we present an optical sensor based on active photonic crystals (PhCs), i.e., the pillars are fabricated directly from an active THz quantum-cascade laser medium. The individual pillars are pumped electrically leading to laser emission at cryogenic temperatures. There is no need to couple light into the resonant structure because the PhC itself is used as the light source. An injected gas changes the resonance condition of the PhC and thereby the laser emission frequency. We achieve an experimental frequency shift of 10(-3) times the center lasing frequency. The minimum detectable refractive index change is 1.6 × 10(-5) RIU.Entities:
Keywords: active resonator; optical microsensor; quantum-cascade laser; terahertz
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22163939 PMCID: PMC3231430 DOI: 10.3390/s110606003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.(a) Transmission of water vapor, methane, carbon monoxide at room temperature and 1 bar [16]. The individual absorption lines are clearly visible. (b) Calculated bandstructure of the THz-QCL. One cascade is marked with the gray box. The growth sequence in nanometers is 9.2/3.0/15.5/4.1/6.6/2.7/8.0/5.5, where the Al.15Ga.85As barriers are marked with bold letters. The lower lasing state is depopulated by a resonant longitudinal optical phonon.
Figure 2.(a) Calculated bandstructure of the PhC for r/a = 0.3 and n = 3.65 using the MIT Photonic Bands package [39,41]. The full bandgaps for TM-polarized light are clearly visible. The designed lasing points are M and K in the lowest band. (b) Predicted modes using finite-difference time-domain calculations [40]. The two lasing modes show a quality factor of 103. The inset shows a schematic of the computational cell; the source is positioned in the central pillar, the probe at the side of the cell.
Figure 3.(a) Schematic of the active PhC sensor. The size of our resonator is comparable with passive microsensors in the visible [11]. The height is 15 μm, the diameter around 200 μm. (b) Resonance frequency shift for Band 1 and 2. Higher bands show a stronger effect of the resonance position on the refractive index.
Figure 4.(a) PhC Spectrum at an applied bias of 18.4 V. There is a clear red-shift with an increasing argon concentration. The two modes visible prior to gas tuning are caused by breaking the six-fold symmetry due to processing imperfections [51]. (b) Line shift for argon and oxygen. Both gases show an almost linear frequency shift with increasing concentration. It saturates at 1.5 GHz or 10−3 times the center frequency.
Figure 5.Refractive index of water vapor at 10 mbar and 10−6 mol [16]. The individual water absorption lines lead to a strong dispersion.