| Literature DB >> 32527826 |
Itai Epstein1, David Alcaraz2, Zhiqin Huang3,4, Varun-Varma Pusapati2, Jean-Paul Hugonin5, Avinash Kumar2, Xander M Deputy3,4, Tymofiy Khodkov2, Tatiana G Rappoport6,7, Jin-Yong Hong8, Nuno M R Peres6,9, Jing Kong8, David R Smith3,4, Frank H L Koppens1,10.
Abstract
Acoustic graphene plasmons are highly confined electromagnetic modes carrying large momentum and low loss in the mid-infrared and terahertz spectra. However, until now they have been restricted to micrometer-scale areas, reducing their confinement potential by several orders of magnitude. Using a graphene-based magnetic resonator, we realized single, nanometer-scale acoustic graphene plasmon cavities, reaching mode volume confinement factors of ~5 × 1010 Such a cavity acts as a mid-infrared nanoantenna, which is efficiently excited from the far field and is electrically tunable over an extremely large broadband spectrum. Our approach provides a platform for studying ultrastrong-coupling phenomena, such as chemical manipulation via vibrational strong coupling, as well as a path to efficient detectors and sensors operating in this long-wavelength spectral range.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32527826 DOI: 10.1126/science.abb1570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728