| Literature DB >> 33547283 |
Stefano Pirotta1, Ngoc-Linh Tran2, Arnaud Jollivet2, Giorgio Biasiol3, Paul Crozat2, Jean-Michel Manceau2, Adel Bousseksou2, Raffaele Colombelli4.
Abstract
Applications relying on mid-infrared radiation (λ ~ 3-30 μm) have progressed at a very rapid pace in recent years, stimulated by scientific and technological breakthroughs like mid-infrared cameras and quantum cascade lasers. On the other side, standalone and broadband devices allowing control of the beam amplitude and/or phase at ultra-fast rates (GHz or more) are still missing. Here we show a free-space amplitude modulator for mid-infrared radiation (λ ~ 10 μm) that can operate at room temperature up to at least 1.5 GHz (-3dB cutoff at ~750 MHz). The device relies on a semiconductor heterostructure enclosed in a judiciously designed metal-metal optical resonator. At zero bias, it operates in the strong light-matter coupling regime up to 300 K. By applying an appropriate bias, the device transitions towards the weak-coupling regime. The large change in reflectance is exploited to modulate the intensity of a mid-infrared continuous-wave laser up to 1.5 GHz.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33547283 PMCID: PMC7864940 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20710-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919