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Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator

For nearly two decades, the field of plasmonics1 - which studies the coupling of electromagnetic waves to the motion of free electrons in a metal2 - has sought to realize subwavelength optical devices for information technology3–6, sensing7,8, nonlinear optics9,10, optical nanotweezers11 and biomedi...

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Autores principales: Haffner, Christian, Chelladurai, Daniel, Fedoryshyn, Yuriy, Josten, Arne, Baeuerle, Benedikt, Heni, Wolfgang, Watanabe, Tatsuhiko, Cui, Tong, Cheng, Bojun, Saha, Soham, Elder, Delwin L., Dalton, Larry. R., Boltasseva, Alexandra, Shalaev, Vladimir, Kinsey, Nathaniel, Leuthold, Juerg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5935232/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29695845
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0031-4
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author Haffner, Christian
Chelladurai, Daniel
Fedoryshyn, Yuriy
Josten, Arne
Baeuerle, Benedikt
Heni, Wolfgang
Watanabe, Tatsuhiko
Cui, Tong
Cheng, Bojun
Saha, Soham
Elder, Delwin L.
Dalton, Larry. R.
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir
Kinsey, Nathaniel
Leuthold, Juerg
author_facet Haffner, Christian
Chelladurai, Daniel
Fedoryshyn, Yuriy
Josten, Arne
Baeuerle, Benedikt
Heni, Wolfgang
Watanabe, Tatsuhiko
Cui, Tong
Cheng, Bojun
Saha, Soham
Elder, Delwin L.
Dalton, Larry. R.
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir
Kinsey, Nathaniel
Leuthold, Juerg
author_sort Haffner, Christian
collection PubMed
description For nearly two decades, the field of plasmonics1 - which studies the coupling of electromagnetic waves to the motion of free electrons in a metal2 - has sought to realize subwavelength optical devices for information technology3–6, sensing7,8, nonlinear optics9,10, optical nanotweezers11 and biomedical applications12. Although the heat generated by ohmic losses is desired for some applications (e.g. photo-thermal therapy), plasmonic devices for sensing and information technology have largely suffered from these losses inherent to metals13. This has led to a widespread stereotype that plasmonics is simply too lossy to be practical. Here, we demonstrate that these losses can be bypassed by employing “resonant switching”. In the proposed approach, light is only coupled to the lossy surface plasmon polaritons in the device’s off-state (in resonance) where attenuation is desired to ensure large extinction ratios and facilitate sub-ps switching. In the on state (out of resonance), light is prevented from coupling to the lossy plasmonic section by destructive interference. To validate the approach, we fabricated a plasmonic electro-optic ring modulator. The experiments confirm that low on-chip optical losses (2.5 dB), high-speed operation (>>100 GHz), good energy efficiency (12 fJ/bit), low thermal drift (4‰ K(-1)), and a compact footprint (sub-λ radius of 1 μm) can be realized within a single device. Our result illustrates the potential of plasmonics to render fast and compact on-chip sensing and communications technologies.
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spelling pubmed-59352322018-10-25 Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator Haffner, Christian Chelladurai, Daniel Fedoryshyn, Yuriy Josten, Arne Baeuerle, Benedikt Heni, Wolfgang Watanabe, Tatsuhiko Cui, Tong Cheng, Bojun Saha, Soham Elder, Delwin L. Dalton, Larry. R. Boltasseva, Alexandra Shalaev, Vladimir Kinsey, Nathaniel Leuthold, Juerg Nature Article For nearly two decades, the field of plasmonics1 - which studies the coupling of electromagnetic waves to the motion of free electrons in a metal2 - has sought to realize subwavelength optical devices for information technology3–6, sensing7,8, nonlinear optics9,10, optical nanotweezers11 and biomedical applications12. Although the heat generated by ohmic losses is desired for some applications (e.g. photo-thermal therapy), plasmonic devices for sensing and information technology have largely suffered from these losses inherent to metals13. This has led to a widespread stereotype that plasmonics is simply too lossy to be practical. Here, we demonstrate that these losses can be bypassed by employing “resonant switching”. In the proposed approach, light is only coupled to the lossy surface plasmon polaritons in the device’s off-state (in resonance) where attenuation is desired to ensure large extinction ratios and facilitate sub-ps switching. In the on state (out of resonance), light is prevented from coupling to the lossy plasmonic section by destructive interference. To validate the approach, we fabricated a plasmonic electro-optic ring modulator. The experiments confirm that low on-chip optical losses (2.5 dB), high-speed operation (>>100 GHz), good energy efficiency (12 fJ/bit), low thermal drift (4‰ K(-1)), and a compact footprint (sub-λ radius of 1 μm) can be realized within a single device. Our result illustrates the potential of plasmonics to render fast and compact on-chip sensing and communications technologies. 2018-04-25 2018-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5935232/ /pubmed/29695845 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0031-4 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Haffner, Christian
Chelladurai, Daniel
Fedoryshyn, Yuriy
Josten, Arne
Baeuerle, Benedikt
Heni, Wolfgang
Watanabe, Tatsuhiko
Cui, Tong
Cheng, Bojun
Saha, Soham
Elder, Delwin L.
Dalton, Larry. R.
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir
Kinsey, Nathaniel
Leuthold, Juerg
Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title_full Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title_fullStr Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title_full_unstemmed Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title_short Low loss Plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
title_sort low loss plasmon-assisted electro-optic modulator
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5935232/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29695845
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0031-4
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