| Literature DB >> 29700414 |
Sergey Lepeshov1, Andrei Gorodetsky2,3,4, Alexander Krasnok5, Nikita Toropov1, Tigran A Vartanyan1, Pavel Belov1, Andrea Alú6, Edik U Rafailov7.
Abstract
Advanced nanophotonics penetrates into other areas of science and technology, ranging from applied physics to biology, which results in many fascinating cross-disciplinary applications. It has been recently demonstrated that suitably engineered light-matter interactions at the nanoscale can overcome the limitations of today's terahertz (THz) photoconductive antennas, making them one step closer to many practical implications. Here, we push forward this concept by comprehensive numerical optimization and experimental investigation of a log-periodic THz photoconductive antenna coupled to a silver nanoantenna array. We shed light on the operation principles of the resulting hybrid THz antenna, providing an approach to boost its performance. By tailoring the size of silver nanoantennas and their arrangement, we obtain an enhancement of optical-to-THz conversion efficiency 2-fold larger compared with previously reported results for similar structures, and the strongest enhancement is around 1 THz, a frequency range barely achievable by other compact THz sources. We also propose a cost-effective fabrication procedure to realize such hybrid THz antennas with optimized plasmonic nanostructures via thermal dewetting process, which does not require any post processing and makes the proposed solution very attractive for applications.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29700414 PMCID: PMC5919981 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-25013-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Illustration of the conventional (a) and silver nanoantennas-loaded hybrid (b) photoconductive THz antenna.
Figure 2(a) Dependence of the absorption enhancement inside the GaAs substrate on the distance between nanoantennas and their radii (D/2). Electric field (b,c) and density of absorbed power (d,e) distributions over the pure GaAs substrate and over the substrate containing Ag nanoantennas, correspondingly. The excitation plane wave (with the electric field strength of 1) propagates normally to the surface. The wavelength of excitation is 800 nm.
Figure 3The typical SEM images of the fabricated log-periodic THz PCA (a), its central part (b), and its gap filled with silver nanoantennas (c).
Figure 4Comparison of the optimized design silver nanoantenna enhanced hybrid PCA performance with the plain PCA. (a) Time domain THz field profiles, and (b) their corresponding spectral amplitudes. Plain antenna signal is plotted in black, hybrid antenna signal in red, thin dotted curve represents the noise floor in the experiment. (c) Spectral intensity enhancement gained due to optimized silver nanoantennas in the gap of the PCA (red line), compared with simulated signal intensity enhancement from hybrid PCA (black dashed line) and simulated enhancement, corresponding to the geometry from the ref.[36] (black dotted curve). (d) Power trends vs bias for optimized hybrid (red) and plain (black) PCAs. Markers correspond to experimentally obtained values, and curves are the fits.