| Literature DB >> 32214114 |
Vivek Raj Shrestha1, Benjamin Craig1, Jiajun Meng2, James Bullock2, Ali Javey3,4, Kenneth B Crozier5,6,7.
Abstract
In recent years there has been much interest concerning the development of modulators in the mid- to long-wave infrared, based on emerging materials such as graphene. These have been frequently pursued for optical communications, though also for other specialized applications such as infrared scene projectors. Here we investigate a new application for graphene modulators in the mid- to long-wave infrared. We demonstrate, for the first time, computational spectroscopy in the mid- to long-wave infrared using a graphene-based metasurface modulator. Furthermore, our metasurface device operates at low gate voltage. To demonstrate computational spectroscopy, we provide our algorithm with the measured reflection spectra of the modulator at different gate voltages. We also provide it with the measured reflected light power as a function of the gate voltage. The algorithm then estimates the input spectrum. We show that the reconstructed spectrum is in good agreement with that measured directly by a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer, with a normalized mean-absolute-error (NMAE) of 0.021.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32214114 PMCID: PMC7096524 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-61998-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic of graphene metasurface modulator. (b) Simulated reflection spectra of device for graphene Fermi energies of 0.1 eV and 0.2 eV. Simulated electric field intensity(|E/E0|2) distribution in cross-section of device in xz-plane, bisecting antennas. Illumination is from air side at normal incidence with E-field polarized along x direction, at a wavelength of λ = 9009 nm. Fermi energy of graphene is (c) 0.2 eV and (d) 0.1 eV.
Figure 2(a) Optical and (b) scanning electron microscope images of device for which plasmonic antennas have period P = 2250 nm. (c) Simulated and (d) measured reflection spectra of devices with periods of P = 1200, 1500 and 2250 nm.
Figure 3(a) Measured drain-source current I vs gate voltage V at drain-source bias for devices with different antenna periods P. Photograph of device after being wire-bonded to chip carrier is shown in the inset. (b) Colormap plot of measured reflection spectrum of device with P = 2250 nm vs gate voltage ( and in steps of 1 V). (c) Measured reflection spectra of sample with period at and . Color represents reflectance. (d) Plot of wavelength at which measured reflectance is minimum for each gate voltage for devices with different periods P = 2250 nm (black squares), 1500 nm (red dots) and 1200 nm (blue triangles).
Wavelength shift per unit voltage of graphene-based mid- to long-wave infrared modulator devices.
| Reference | Voltage range | Wavelength shift (nm) | Wavelength shift per voltage (nm/V) | Polarization- insensitive? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 0 to 80 V | 600 | 7.5 | No |
| 14 | 0 to −390V | 330 | 0.846 | No |
| 16 | 90 to −80V | 490 | 3.267 | No |
| 17 | 0 to 183 V | <1000 | <5.464 | No |
| 29 | +7 V to −3V | 1 μm | 100 | No |
| Our work | −10 to +4 V | 516 | 36.85 | Yes |
Figure 4(a) Schematic illustration of principle of spectral reconstruction with graphene metasurface modulator. (b) Integrated signal vs gate voltage for three metasurface devices. (c) Spectra of infrared light source (, from silicon carbide globar) as reconstructed using graphene metasurface modulator (red curve) and as measured directly by FTIR (black curve). Wavelength range is to , with 2751 data points.