| Literature DB >> 28526826 |
Jing Wang1, Ying Yu2, Yu-Ming Wei1, Shun-Fa Liu3, Juntao Li1, Zhang-Kai Zhou1, Zhi-Chuan Niu4, Si-Yuan Yu3,5, Xue-Hua Wang6.
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate second harmonic generation in a single hexagonal GaAs nanowire. An excellent frequency converter based on this nanowire excited using a femtosecond laser is demonstrated to operate over a range from 730 nm to 1960 nm, which is wider than previously reported ranges for nanowires in the literature. The converter always operates with a high conversion efficiency of ~10-5 W-1 which is ~103 times higher than that obtained from the surface of bulk GaAs. This nanoscale nolinear optical converter that simultaneously owns high efficiency and broad bandwidth may open a new way for application in imaging, bio-sensing and on-chip all-optical signal processing operations.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28526826 PMCID: PMC5438389 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02199-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram showing the experimental setup used to measure SHG from a single GaAs NW. M: mirror; WP1, WP2: half-wave plates; LP1, LP2, FP: polarizers; BS1, BS2, BS3: beam splitters; L1, L2: lenses; SF: short-pass filter. (b) CCD image of a GaAs NW with the pump laser spot focused on it. (c) SEM image of single GaAs NW on a SiO2 substrate, where the NW has a diameter of approximately 500 nm and length of approximately 5.55 μm. The inset shows the hexagonal NW cross-section.
Figure 2(a) Spectra of the excited SHG and the FW laser at a FW laser power of 87.12 μW. The inset shows that the SHG signal has a square power dependence on the FW laser. (b) Polarimetric plot of the total SHG signal under parallel polarized excitation (TM). (c) Total SHG signal as a function of the FW polarization angle.
Figure 3(a) SHG at a range of discrete FW wavelengths with constant FW power of 4.07 mW. (b) Square power dependence of the SHG signal on the FW laser demonstrated at each discrete FW wavelength from 730 nm to 1000 nm.
Figure 4Conversion efficiency of SHG signals over a wide FW wavelength range.
Figure 5(a) SHG signal excited using 1960 nm FW laser. (b) Square power dependence of the SHG signal on the FW laser input.