| Literature DB >> 29376381 |
Xinglin Wen1, Weigao Xu1, Weijie Zhao1, Jacob B Khurgin2, Qihua Xiong1,3.
Abstract
Modulating second harmonic generation (SHG) by a static electric field through either electric-field-induced SHG or charge-induced SHG has been well documented. Nonetheless, it is essential to develop the ability to dynamically control and manipulate the nonlinear properties, preferably at high speed. Plasmonic hot carriers can be resonantly excited in metal nanoparticles and then injected into semiconductors within 10-100 fs, where they eventually decay on a comparable time scale. This allows one to rapidly manipulate all kinds of characteristics of semiconductors, including their nonlinear properties. Here we demonstrate that plasmonically generated hot electrons can be injected from plasmonic nanostructure into bilayer (2L) tungsten diselenide (WSe2), breaking the material inversion symmetry and thus inducing an SHG. With a set of pump-probe experiments we confirm that it is the dynamic separation electric field resulting from the hot carrier injection (rather than a simple optical field enhancement) that is the cause of SHG. Transient absorption measurement further substantiate the plasmonic hot electrons injection and allow us to measure a rise time of ∼120 fs and a fall time of 1.9 ps. Our study creates opportunity for the ultrafast all-optical control of SHG in an all-optical manner that may enable a variety of applications.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmonic hot carrier injection; bilayer transitional metal dichalcogenides; charge induced second harmonic generation; inversion symmetry; transient absorption spectroscopy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29376381 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189