Researchers at the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have created a new nonlinear metasurface, or meta mirror, that could one day enable the
miniaturization of laser systems. The invention, called a "nonlinear mirror" by the researchers, could help advance nonlinear laser systems that are used for chemical sensing, explosives detection, biomedical research and potentially many other applications. The researchers' study will be published in the July 3 issue of Nature.
The metamaterials were created with nonlinear optical response a million times as strong as traditional nonlinear materials and demonstrated frequency conversion in films 100 times as thin as human hair using light intensity comparable with that of a laser pointer.
Nonlinear optical effects are widely used by engineers and scientists to generate new light frequencies, perform laser diagnostics and advance quantum
computing.
Due to the small extent of optical nonlinearity in naturally occurring
materials, high light intensities and long propagation distances in nonlinear
crystals are typically required to produce detectable nonlinear optical
effects.
The
research team led by UT Austin's Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering professors Mikhail Belkin and Andrea Alu, in collaboration with
colleagues from the Technical University of Munich, has created thin-film
nonlinear metamaterials with optical response many orders of magnitude larger
than that of traditional nonlinear materials. The scientists demonstrated this
functionality by realizing a 400-nanometer-thick nonlinear mirror that reflects
radiation at twice the input light frequency. For the given input intensity and
structure thickness, the new nonlinear metamaterial produces approximately 1
million times larger frequency-doubled output, compared with similar structures
based on conventional materials.
"This
work opens a new paradigm in nonlinear optics by exploiting the unique
combination of exotic wave interaction in metamaterials and of quantum
engineering in semiconductors," said Professor Andrea Alu.
The
metamaterial at the basis of this unusual optical response consists of a
sequence of thin layers made of indium, gallium and arsenic on the one hand and
aluminum, indium and arsenic on the other. The researchers stacked
approximately 100 of these layers, each between 1 nanometer and 12 nanometers
thick, and sandwiched them between a layer of gold at the bottom and a pattern
of asymmetric gold nanocrosses on top. The thin semiconductor layers confine
electrons into desired quantum states, and gold nanocrosses resonate at input
and output frequencies to enable the the nonlinear optical response of the
mirror.
The
realized mirror converts light from a wavelength of 8 micrometers to 4
micrometers; however, the structures can be tailored to work at other
wavelengths, from near-infrared to mid-infrared to terahertz.
"Alongside
frequency doubling, our structures may be designed for sum- or
difference-frequency generation, as well as a variety of four-wave mixing
processes," said UT Austin graduate student Jongwon Lee, the lead author
on the paper.
"Our
work unveils a pathway towards the development of ultrathin, highly nonlinear
optical elements for efficient frequency conversion that will operate without
stringent phase-matching constraints of bulk nonlinear crystals," said
Professor Mikhail Belkin.
Belkin
and Alu led a team of researchers that included electrical and computer
engineering graduate students Jongwon Lee, Mykhailo Tymchenko and Feng Lu.
Pai-Yen Chen and Christos Argyropoulos, who graduated from the Cockrell School
in 2013, also contributed to the paper. The semiconductor material was grown at
the Walter Schottky Institute, Technical University of Munich.
0 comments:
Post a Comment