| Literature DB >> 31332203 |
Matthew Klein1,2, Bekele H Badada1, Rolf Binder1,2, Adam Alfrey1, Max McKie1, Michael R Koehler3, David G Mandrus3,4,5, Takashi Taniguchi6, Kenji Watanabe6, Brian J LeRoy1, John R Schaibley7.
Abstract
A plasmonic modulator is a device that controls the amplitude or phase of propagating plasmons. In a pure plasmonic modulator, the presence or absence of a plasmonic pump wave controls the amplitude of a plasmonic probe wave through a channel. This control has to be mediated by an interaction between disparate plasmonic waves, typically requiring the integration of a nonlinear material. In this work, we demonstrate a 2D semiconductor nonlinear plasmonic modulator based on a WSe2 monolayer integrated on top of a lithographically defined metallic waveguide. We utilize the strong interaction between the surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) and excitons in the WSe2 to give a 73 % change in transmission through the device. We demonstrate control of the propagating SPPs using both optical and SPP pumps, realizing a 2D semiconductor nonlinear plasmonic modulator, with an ultrafast response time of 290 fs.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31332203 PMCID: PMC6646399 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11186-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Plasmonic modulator device and linear response. a Depiction of the 2D material plasmonic device. SPPs are launched at the input of the device by focusing a free space laser onto an input coupler. The SPPs propagate through the waveguide where they can interact with excitons in the active WSe2 layer, encapsulated in hBN. The SPPs are coupled back to free space photons by an output grating coupler. The upper inset depicts the hBN-WSe2-hBN heterostructure on top of the waveguide. The lower inset shows the axes used for the theory and simulations. b Optical image of the main device used in the experiments. The red dot shows where the grating was illuminated with the input laser, and the red slits show the typical far-field output profile. The blue box shows the location of the active hBN-WSe2-hBN heterostructure. c Transmission data of the hBN-WSe2-hBN plasmonic device (black). The normalized transmission of the bare waveguide is shown (red). The inset shows the far-field PL spectrum of the device when excited with a 532 nm (2.33 eV) laser
Fig. 2Linear response of exciton surface plasmon polaritons. a Calculated real (gray) and imaginary (blue) parts of the dispersion relation for exciton surface plasmon polaritons, E-SPPs. The inset shows the dispersion near the exciton resonance (1.737 eV), whose location is depicted by dashed boxes on the main figure. b Measured transmission at the exciton resonance as a function of the effective WSe2 sample length on the waveguide
Fig. 3Optical control of SPP propagation. a Depiction of the photon-SPP pump-probe measurements. SPPs propagating through the device interact with excitons in the WSe2 layer. A free space laser illuminating the WSe2 controls the SPP propagation by saturating the exciton absorption. b DT/T measurements for three pump photon energies. c Pump power dependence of the DT signal near the peak of the exciton response (1.739 eV pump, 1.743 nm probe)
Fig. 4SPP control of SPP propagation. a Depiction of the SPP-SPP pump-probe measurements. Pump and probe SPPs are launched at the input grating coupler. SPPs propagating through the device interact with excitons in the WSe2 layer. In this plasmonic modulator configuration, the pump-SPP saturates the exciton absorption, resulting in an increase in probe SPP transmission. b SPP pump energy dependence of the DT/T spectrum. c SPP pump power dependence of the DT signal near the peak of the exciton response (pump 1.739 eV, probe 1.741 eV). d Time resolved DT/T response for a similar device measured at 11 K with a photon energy of 1.736 eV. The blue points are the data and the cyan curve is a biexponential fit whose time constants are shown. e SPP pump pulse energy dependence of the pulsed DT response measured near zero time delay