Terahertz frequency time-domain spectroscopy employing free-space radiation has frequently been used to probe the elementary excitations of low-dimensional systems. The diffraction limit, however, prevents its use for the in-plane study of individual laterally-defined nanostructures. Here, we demonstrate a planar terahertz frequency plasmonic circuit in which photoconductive material is monolithically integrated with a two-dimensional electron system. Plasmons with a broad spectral range (up to ~ 400 GHz) are excited by injecting picosecond-duration pulses, generated and detected by a photoconductive semiconductor, into a high mobility two-dimensional electron system. Using voltage modulation of a Schottky gate overlying the two-dimensional electron system, we form a tuneable plasmonic cavity, and observe electrostatic manipulation of the plasmon resonances. Our technique offers a direct route to access the picosecond dynamics of confined electron transport in a broad range of lateral nanostructures.
Terahertz frequency time-domain spectroscopy employing free-space radiation has frequently been used to probe the elementary excitations of low-dimensional systems. The diffraction limit, however, prevents its use for the in-plane study of individual laterally-defined nanostructures. Here, we demonstrate a planar terahertz frequency plasmonic circuit in which photoconductive material is monolithically integrated with a two-dimensional electron system. Plasmons with a broad spectral range (up to ~ 400 GHz) are excited by injecting picosecond-duration pulses, generated and detected by a photoconductive semiconductor, into a high mobility two-dimensional electron system. Using voltage modulation of a Schottky gate overlying the two-dimensional electron system, we form a tuneable plasmonic cavity, and observe electrostatic manipulation of the plasmon resonances. Our technique offers a direct route to access the picosecond dynamics of confined electron transport in a broad range of lateral nanostructures.
Picosecond time-resolved measurements of low-dimensional semiconductors can reveal a
diverse range of physical phenomena. Typically, a device containing a two-dimensional
electron system (2DES) is subjected to free-space propagating terahertz (THz) radiation
(100 GHz < f < 5 THz),
and either the transmitted THz response and/or the rectification response of the 2DES is
then used to determine information about the system. Such experiments have provided
information on, for example, coherent cyclotron resonance in a 2DES12,
ultrastrong light-matter interactions between inter-Landau level transitions of a 2DES
and the photonic modes of artificial resonators34, THz-wave modulation
at room temperature567, and recently, the formation of plasmonic
crystals using a gate-controlled 2DES89. The latter is particularly
exciting, since the plasmonic cavity resonances in 2DESs on length scales of a few
microns occur in the THz frequency range, offering the possibility of fabricating
plasmonic circuits that can be used to manipulate THz signals.Another class of experiments involves the planar integration of a 2DES into THz
waveguides, which allows pulses to be either directly coupled into the system by ohmic
contacts, using a flip-chip arrangement10, or coupled by proximity to a
nearby THz waveguide, where they are exposed to and interact with the evanescent THz
electric field11. In both these cases, electrical pulses are usually
guided along a lithographically-defined, sub-wavelength transmission line structure
formed on a separate substrate, before interacting with the 2DES. The in-plane nature of
these techniques provides an enhanced interaction between the THz signal and the
low-dimensional system relative to that achieved through free-space coupling. Such
techniques have allowed ultrafast ballistic picosecond transport10 and
magnetoplamon resonances1112 to be studied.Recently, we introduced an alternative technique in which growth-optimized LT-GaAs
(providing THz-bandwidth pulse excitation and detection) and a high mobility 2DES
channel are integrated in a single molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) wafer13.
Here, we demonstrate that such integrated structures can be used to form broadband (up
to ~400 GHz) on-chip plasmonic circuits capable of
the in-plane excitation, detection, and electrostatic manipulation of 2D plasmons in
quantum-confined 2DESs. The dynamic evolution of plasmon resonances in the gated 2DES
region, controlled by an applied voltage, is recorded with a few-picosecond time
resolution. Our methodology thus opens up a wide range of possible experiments in which
broadband pulsed THz radiation is used to probe individual mesoscopic or nanoscale
systems defined lithographically in a 2DES, rather than ensembles.
Results
Schematic and principle
A diagram of our THz 2D plasmonic circuit, in which the photoconductive material
of LT-GaAs is monolithically integrated with 2DES, is shown in Fig. 1a. The device was fabricated from an MBE wafer (Fig. 1b), which comprised a layer of LT-GaAs along with a
GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure containing a 2DES (see further details in Methods).
Two pairs of photoconductive (PC) switch contacts were then defined on the
LT-GaAs layer, after it was subjected to a selective wet-etch to remove the 2DES
and expose the underlying photoconductive LT-GaAs layer. A coplanar waveguide
(CPW) guides THz pulses generated from, for example, PC switch S1, to an ohmic
contact that is used to inject the picosecond pulses into the
(73-μm-long) 2DESmesa. When the propagating THz pulse arrives at
this ohmic contact, a portion of the pulse energy is injected into the 2DES,
transmitted through the 2DES, and then exits through a second ohmic contact,
before being coupled into the adjacent section of CPW. The first ohmic contact
also reflects a portion of the propagating pulse. The time-resolved reflected or
transmitted signals are then sampled at S2 or S3/S4, respectively. As shown in
Fig. 1c, a 4.4-μm-wide metal gate was
defined on the top of the 2DESmesa. A negative gate voltage
(V) applied to this gate was used to deplete
carriers and so tune the electron concentration (n) in
the 2DES underneath. The voltage (V) required to
deplete carriers completely underneath the gate at 4 K after illumination was
~−3.0 V (see Supplementary Note 1 and Figure S1).
Figure 1
Diagram of the THz 2D plasmonic circuit.
(a) Schematic diagram of the THz plasmonic circuit and the measurement
arrangement for gate-modulation signals. S1/S2 and S3/S4 are two pairs of PC
switches formed on opposite sides of the 2DES mesa, which are used to
generate or detect the THz pulses; pulses are generated by application of a
bias while under illumination by a 800 nm pulsed Ti:sapphire
laser, while detection is achieved by measuring the generated photocurrent
as a function of optical path time delay. (b) The layer structure of
the wafer monolithically integrating the LT-GaAs and GaAs/AlGaAs
heterostructure containing the 2DES (red region). (c) Microscopic
image of the 2DES mesa. A 4.4-μm-long metallic gate was located
on top of the 2DES mesa, and the widths of the ungated regions on either
side of the gate were 19.7 μm and
48.9 μm.
Our 2DESmesa supports the propagation of 2D plasmons at THz frequencies1415. Therefore, when a THz pulse is injected into the 2DES, 2D
plasmons are excited over a broad frequency range, and the 2DES acts as a
plasmonic transmission line. The plasmonic dispersion relation in a 2DES is
given by:where e and m are the charge and effective
mass of electrons in GaAs, respectively, ε0 is the
vacuum dielectric permittivity,
ε(k)
is the effective relative permittivity, and k is the plasmon wave
number161718. Unlike bulk plasmons, the resonance
frequency of 2D plasmons depend on geometric size. In order to excite a resonant
plasmonic mode, k must satisfy the condition
k = nπ/L, where
n = 1, 2, 3…, and L is the
length of the plasmonic cavity. The phase velocity of plasmons is then obtained
using
v= ω/k.
In the ungated regions, the 2DES behaves as a dispersive, single-wire-like
plasmonic transmission line19. In the gated region, however, the
metallic gate screens the Coulombic restoring force, which has the effect of
reducing the acceleration of electrons driven by the exciting THz electric
field. The plasmons in this region therefore have a much lower
v in comparison with the ungated areas. The
effective permittivity
ε(k)
in the gated region is given by
ε (k) = [ε2 + ε1coth(kd)]/2,
where ε1 and ε2 are
the relative permittivity of AlGaAs and GaAs, respectively, and d is the
distance from the metallic gate to the 2DES18. The plasmon
dispersion can hence be written:If the screening effect is strong (when kd→0), the
transmission line effectively then acts as a parallel-plate, plasmonic
waveguide, supporting a dispersionless transverse electromagnetic (TEM)
mode817.
THz pulse propagation in the 2DES
To investigate the injection into and propagation of THz pulses through the 2DES,
we measured the input and transmitted pulses using what is, in effect, an
on-chip THz time-domain spectrometer2021. Initial measurements
were performed in a continuous-flow helium cryostat at 4 K (see Supplementary Note 2 and Figure S2).
Figure 2a shows the measured input and reflected
pulses as a function of V. The first peak observed at
0 ps is the input pulse generated by S1, and detected by S2 through the
conductive coupling of the two adjacent PC switches across the centre conductor.
The second peak, centred at 9.8 ps, is the signal reflected from the ohmic
contact closest to S1/S2. When a THz pulse arrives at this ohmic contact, it is
partly reflected from the CPW/2DES interface, whilst a portion of the signal is
injected into the 2DESmesa. As V is reduced from 0 V
to V (-3.0 V), a
‘shoulder’ appears on the reflected time-domain signal.
The amplitude of this feature increases with decreasing
V, and saturates at V.
We attribute the ‘shoulder’ feature to the increased
reflection of the signal propagating in the 2DES by the elevated barrier under
the gated region when a negative voltage is applied. When
V= 0 V,
and since v in gated region is lower than that in
ungated region, the mismatch of k
(k = ω/v)
leads to the formation of a barrier. As V decreases,
n and the corresponding
v in the gated region also both decrease. As a
result, the mismatch of k between the gated and ungated regions
increases, which results in the observed increase in reflection from the
interface between gated and ungated regions. Once V
reaches V, the 2DES channel is fully pinched off, so
the amplitude of the reflection cannot increase any further.
Figure 2
Input and transmitted THz pulse through a 2DES channel.
(a) The measured input (and reflected) pulses for different
V at 4 K. The THz pulse is generated by S1
and detected by S2. (b) The measured transmitted signals through the
2DES for different V at 4 K. The coplanar mode THz
pulse is generated by biasing both S3 and S4, with detection by S2.
The CPW allows two dominant quasi-TEM modes of propagation: a coplanar and a
slotline mode. For the input pulse measurement, the signal launched from a
single PC switch is a mixture of two modes. In our structure, a pair of PC
switches (S3 and S4) is located at either side of the CPW centre conductor,
allowing mode-selective excitation of the waveguide by the choice of PC switch
biases21 (see Supplementary Note 3). We found that, by decreasing
V from 0 V to V,
the transmitted coplanar mode signal showed a strong dependence on
V, whereas the transmitted slotline mode
component showed no such dependence (Supplementary Figures S3b,c), indicating that only the coplanar mode
is efficiently injected into the 2DES. By decreasing V
from 0 V to V, the transmitted coplanar mode signal
showed a strong dependence on V. When the 2DES channel
is pinched-off (i.e. for
V≤ -3 V),
there is still a sizable signal, caused by a crosstalk signal resulting from the
capacitive coupling of pulses between the ohmic contacts and the coupling
between two ungated plasmon cavities22. This parasitic signal
does not depend on V, however, allowing us to obtain
the pulse transmitted through the 2DES channel by subtraction of the crosstalk
signal for a pinched-off channel (at
V= -3 V,
T = 4 K). As shown in Fig.
2b, the obtained transmitted signal does not alter significantly
between 0 V and -2 V. However, as
V approaches V, the
mismatch in k between the gated and ungated regions greatly increases,
owing to the decrease of n and
v in the gated region (Supplementary Figure S4), leading to a sharp
decrease in transmission. In addition, the full-width-half-maximum (FWHM) of the
transmitted pulse at
V= 0 V is
approximately 9 ps, which is much larger than that of the input
pulse width (~1.5 ps). The contribution to this pulse
broadening within the CPW region is 1.2 ps, judged by comparing the FWHM of
reflected pulse (~2.7 ps) which propagates the same
distance within CPW as the transmitted pulse (Fig. 2a),
with this input pulse width. Therefore, the observed pulse broadening (of
~9–1.5 ps = 7.5 ps)
is mainly caused by the strong dispersion of plasmons in the 2DES, and
especially in the ungated regions where their dispersion is greater1823.
Electrostatic modulation of 2D plasmons
The dynamics of 2D plasmons in the 2DES can be obtained by measurements of the
transmitted pulse as a function of V. However,
comparative data obtained by subtracting pulses measured at different times
exhibited poor signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), owing to a very slow drift of the
laser power and/or focus position. We therefore employed a different technique
for more detailed measurements, whereby a small AC signal
(V) was superimposed onto the DC gate bias,
allowing lock-in detection (see Fig. 1a). The
time-resolved current of the transmitted pulse is denoted by
I(t,V), and its change
(ΔI(t,V)) with the swing
of gate bias around the average voltage V, i.e.
ΔI(t,V)/ΔV,
is extracted using standard lock-in techniques. If the amplitude of
V is sufficiently small, the measured signal
is equivalent to
dI(t,V)/dV (see
Supplementary Note 5). By
altering V at a fixed V,
changes in the transmitted THz signal as a function of
V could then be recorded. This gate-modulation
technique provided an improvement in SNR of more than 50 times (see Supplementary Note 6 and Figure S6).
In order to interpret our gate-modulation results, a full analytical model was
developed (see Supplementary Note
7). Based on this model, we find that a resonant excitation signal is
selected by the gate-modulation, allowing the resonance frequency of plasmons in
the cavity to be extracted.The detailed gate-modulation measurements were performed in a closed-cycle
He3/He4 dilution refrigerator (see Methods for
details)13. Figure 3a shows the
gate-modulation signals obtained at
V= -2 V, when a
PC switch bias (V) of +5 V was applied to
S1 to generate a picosecond pulsed signal propagating towards S3. In order to
remove high-frequency noise in the data, without losing useful information, the
measured signals were passed through a digital low-pass filter with a cut-off
frequency of 0.6 THz, chosen to be higher than the upper frequency
of the gate-modulated signals (~0.4 THz). The time taken
for the pulse to propagate through the structure corresponds to the sum of the
transit time in the CPW (t), and that in the 2DES
(t2). Measurement of pulses generated at S1 and
measured at S3 were superposed with a measurement of the reverse-transmitted THz
signal (i.e. propagating from S3, biased at +5 V, to S1)
revealing a total round-trip time,
Δt = 2(t+ t),
of 33.3 ps (Fig. 3a). The measured
gate-modulation signals were found to be symmetric for the two propagation
directions (which was verified by swapping the excitation and detection
switches). The t was found to be
~9.8 ps, by measuring the time delay between the input
pulse and its reflection from the CPW/2DES interface (Fig.
2a). Thus, the t2 is
~6.9 ps. The corresponding average pulse velocity in the
2DES is
~1.1 × 107
m/s, which is an order of magnitude smaller than that in the CPW
(~1.1 × 108
m/s) and close to the expected plasmon velocity in the 2DES, supporting our
assumption of plasmonic excitation. In addition, the transmitted signals shown
in Fig. 3a are composed of clear periodic oscillations.
When a picosecond pulse is injected into the 2DES, the frequency components of
the pulse that satisfy the Fabry-Perot (FP) resonance conditions of the gated or
ungated plasmonic cavities are trapped, and undergo leaky oscillations within
the cavity. Since n in the gated cavity is tuned by
V, the resonant signals from the gated plasmonic
cavity are strongly modulated by the DC component of
V. Using lock-in technique, the modulated resonant
excitation signal is recorded, and the corresponding resonance frequency and
decay of the excitation can be obtained, using our analytical model. In the
corresponding fast Fourier transform (FFT) spectrum (Fig.
3b), the two strongest plasmon resonance frequencies observed are
132 ± 2 GHz and
264 ± 2 GHz, corresponding to
the fundamental and second plasmonic mode of the gated plasmonic cavity,
respectively. Using
n= 4.9 × 1015
m−2 at the same
V= -2 V,
obtained from the in situ two-terminal magnetotransport measurement (see
Supplementary Note 4), the
predicted plasmon resonance frequencies in the gated region calculated using
Equation (2) are 136 GHz
(n = 1 and
k = π/4.4 μm−1)
and 264 GHz (n = 2 and
k = 2π/4.4 μm−1),
which are close to our measured values. The gated region of 2DES works as a FP
cavity, and the gate length is equivalent to a half wavelength and wavelength
for the fundamental and second modes, respectively. There is also a resonance
mode around 311 GHz in Fig. 3b (indicated by
black arrow), which can be attributed to the fundamental plasmon mode in the
19.7-μm-long ungated region (the calculated frequency using Eq. (1) is 306 GHz). That the ungated plasmon
resonance signals can be extracted from these measurements is at first somewhat
surprising, but this can be explained from our analytical model (see
Supplementary Note 7). Unlike the modes formed by the gated cavity, this
resonance does not change frequency when V is altered.
However, as shown in Fig. 2b, the transmission of the
broadband injected signal through the 2DES is also strongly modulated by the
swing of V when V is below
-2 V. Therefore, the amplitude of oscillation in the ungated cavity
is also modulated, allowing this resonance mode to also be detected using our
gate-modulation method. Aside from these three main resonance modes, there are
several other weaker resonance peaks in the whole spectrum, which can be
classified as coupled modes of two neighbouring cavities for low frequency
(<100 GHz) resonances, and higher order modes.
Figure 3
Modulation of 2D plasmons in a 2DES channel.
(a) A superposition of the measured gate-modulation signals as a
function of time for
V= -2.0 V, in
which the THz pulses propagate from S1 to S3 (positive time domain) and from
S3 to S1 (negative time domain). (b) The FFT spectrum of the
gate-modulation signal measured at
V= -2.0 V.
The resonance at 311 ± 6 GHz
is indicated by a black arrow.
To investigate the dependence of the plasmon resonances on
V, we measured the time-domain profiles of the
gate-modulation signals as a function of V (Fig. 4a). As V is swept toward
V, n in the gated
region decreases, and correspondingly the plasmon resonance frequency in the
gated region is reduced. This results in an increase in the observed plasmonic
oscillation period of the time domain signals. In the corresponding FFT spectra
(Fig. 4b), the frequency of the first gated plasmon
mode is tuned from 159 GHz to 111 GHz by sweeping
V from -0.4 V to -2.5 V,
and the red-shift is 48 GHz. Meanwhile, the frequency of the second
mode experiences a red-shift of 97 GHz from 302 GHz to
205 GHz. The values of resonance frequencies and red-shift for the
second mode are approximately twice that of the first mode. From the measured
frequencies of the gated plasmon modes in Fig. 4b, we
calculated n for each value of
V using Equation (2) and
compared them with the measured n from
magnetotransport measurements, as shown in Fig. 4c, and
found good agreement between these values.
Figure 4
Electrostatic manipulation of 2D plasmon resonances.
(a) Colour-scale plot of the measured gate-modulation signals plotted
as a function of time and V. (b)
Colour-scale plot of the normalized FFT spectra for gate-modulation signals
measured as a function of frequency and V. The
resonance around 311 GHz for
V≤ -2.0 V
is indicated by a black arrow. (c) The n in
the gated region as a function of V. These are
calculated using the measured frequencies of fundamental (black dots) and
second (red dots) plasmon modes and from the two-terminal magnetotransport
measurements of the same 2DES mesa (blue asterisks).
Conclusion
We have demonstrated an on-chip THz system that allows the picosecond-duration
excitation, detection and electrostatic manipulation of 2D plasmons. Using a
gate-modulation technique, we observed the picosecond-resolved time evolution of
confined 2D plasmons. This work not only provides a useful technique with which to
study the ultrafast THz response and carrier dynamics of low-dimensional
semiconductor structures, but also has potential future application in the
development of more complex plasmonic circuits capable of manipulating THz waves. We
note that in the system studied here, the properties of the 2DES could in principle
be explored at even higher frequencies if the bandwidth of the plasmonic circuit
could be expanded, with substrate thinning of the integrated wafer being one
potential route to achieve this goal24.
Methods
Device fabrication and characterization
The wafer from which the device was fabricated was grown by MBE with the layer
structure shown in Fig. 1b. To obtain
n and μ of the 2DES, a Hall
bar was fabricated, and magnetotransport measurements were undertaken in a
1.2 K helium bath cryostat with a superconducting magnet. The
n and μ of the 2DES in the dark
were 3.66 × 1015
m−2 and 48.7 m2/(V·s),
respectively. After illumination by a HeNe laser,
n= 6.26 × 1015
m−2 and
μ = 89.5 m2/(V·s)
were obtained. The corresponding momentum relaxation time
(τ) was calculated to be 33
ps.To fabricate the device, first a
100 × 25 μm2
mesa containing the 2DES was defined using a sulphuric acid etch
(H2SO4:H2O2:H2O = 1:8:70)
to a depth of 100 nm. Next, two
12.5 × 30 μm2
ohmic contacts to the 2DES were formed by depositing Au-Ge-Ni alloy
(200 nm) at either end of the 2DES region, followed by annealing at
430 °C for 80 seconds. A continuous
4.4-μm-wide gate was then defined on top of the mesa using
electron-beam lithography, and subsequent deposition of Ti/Au
(10/60 nm)) by electron-beam evaporation. To expose the underlying
PC LT-GaAs layer, the region immediately surrounding the 2DES was protected
using photoresist (Shipley S1813), and the exposed surface etched in a selective
etchant mixed from 50% citric acid and 30% H2O2 in a 3:1
ratio, down to an AlAs etch-stop layer, which was subsequently removed in dilute
HF (5% concentration) to reveal a smooth LT-GaAs surface. A CPW structure,
designed to incorporate two pairs of symmetric PC switches, was next defined by
photolithography, and metallised via electron-beam evaporation of Ti/Au
(10/150 nm). In the CPW structure, the widths of the centre
conductor and gaps were 30 μm and
20 μm, respectively. The CPW centre conductor was
aligned to the ohmic contacts formed previously on the 2DES. Corresponding
breaks in the ground plane were incorporated, both to suppress crosstalk, and to
allow contact to be made to the 2DES gate.
Cryogenic measurement in 4K cryostat and dilution refrigerator
For measurements performed at 4 K, the sample was mounted in a
continuous-flow liquid helium cryostat, with optical access provided through a
z-cut quartz window20. The laser beams were focused through the
quartz window onto the PC switches. The average laser power of both the pump and
probe beams was fixed at 10 mW.For measurements below 4 K, and in magnetic fields, the sample was
mounted on a holder attached to mixing plate of a closed-cycle
He3/He4 dilution refrigerator, located at the
centre of a superconducting magnet. The experimental setup comprised
in-situ piezoelectric stages used to position the laser beams
transmitted via fibre optics on the sample surface, as discussed in detail in
ref. 13. Both the pump and probe laser beam average
power were set to be 2 mW, which resulted in heating of the sample
stage to around 2 K, measured using an embedded RuO2
thermometer immediately adjacent to the device.
Experimental setup for input and transmitted pulse measurements
For input pulse measurements (see Supplementary Figure S2a), shunt interconnects
were used to apply a DC bias to a PC switch (S1) which, when illuminated using a
100 fs pulsed, 800 nm near infrared (NIR) laser, generated a THz
pulse that was coupled into the overlaid CPW structure. The unbiased PC switch
immediately adjacent to S1 (S2) was illuminated by a time-delayed and
mechanically chopped NIR laser beam, allowing time-resolved detection of the THz
pulse launched into the CPW, and of reflected pulses generated from the 2DES.
The current flowing in S2 was then extracted using standard lock-in techniques,
with an optical chopper used to provide reference.For transmitted pulse measurements (see Supplementary Figure S3a), a pair of PC
switches (S3 and S4) were both biased positively with respect to the centre
conductor and illuminated by a defocused pump laser beam, in order to generate a
coplanar mode within the waveguide21. The PC switch on the
opposite side of the 2DESmesa (S1), illuminated by the chopped probe beam, was
then used to detect pulses which had propagated along the CPW and through the
attached 2DES. In order to extract measurements of pulses transmitted through
the 2DESmesa, the crosstalk signal between two ends of CPW was first measured
by pinching off the 2DES channel
(V= -3 V). The
signals transmitted at different V were then measured.
By subtracting the crosstalk signal from each measured signal, the pulses
transmitted through the 2DES were obtained.
Experimental setup for gate-modulation measurement
As shown in Fig. 1a, S1 and S3 were illuminated by the pump
and probe laser beams, respectively. The THz pulse was generated by S1, which
was biased by a DC voltage. Both V and
V were applied on the metallic gate
simultaneously to control n underneath the gated
region. V and V (the
latter an 87 Hz sinusoidal wave, with
25 ~ 100 mV rms amplitude) were
supplied by a digital-to-analogue converter and an ultra-pure sinewave
oscillator, respectively. The gate-modulation signal was measured at S3 using a
lock-in amplifier, whose reference signal was provided via the synchronous
output of the sinewave oscillator. To facilitate the alignment of the laser beam
in the dilution refrigerator, we use one rather than two PC switches to generate
the THz pulse. Though the pulse generated from a single PC switch is a mixture
of coplanar and slotline modes, only the coplanar mode signal could pass through
the 2DES and be modulated by V (see Supplementary
Note 3). In this configuration, the THz pulse propagates through the 2DES in the
direction from S1 to S3. To measure the gate-modulation signal for a THz pulse
propagating in the opposite direction, the electrical connections of S1 and S3
were swapped whilst maintaining fixed laser beam positions, and an equivalent
measurement was taken. In this case, the laser beams swap functionality
(i.e. the pump beam is now the probe beam, and vice
versa).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Wu, J. et al. Excitation, detection, and
electrostatic manipulation of terahertz-frequency range plasmons in a
two-dimensional electron system. Sci. Rep.
5, 15420; doi: 10.1038/srep15420 (2015).
Authors: G Scalari; C Maissen; D Turcinková; D Hagenmüller; S De Liberato; C Ciuti; C Reichl; D Schuh; W Wegscheider; M Beck; J Faist Journal: Science Date: 2012-03-16 Impact factor: 47.728
Authors: Xiangfeng Wang; David J Hilton; Lei Ren; Daniel M Mittleman; Junichiro Kono; John L Reno Journal: Opt Lett Date: 2007-07-01 Impact factor: 3.776
Authors: Christopher Russell; Christopher D Wood; Andrew D Burnett; Lianhe Li; Edmund H Linfield; A Giles Davies; John E Cunningham Journal: Lab Chip Date: 2013-08-21 Impact factor: 6.799