6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125aed5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Invited Article: Ultra-broadband terahertz coherent detection via a silicon nitride-based deep sub-wavelength metallic slit

Alessandro BusaccaMarco PecciantiMatteo ClericiLuca RazzariYoann JestinMohamed ChakerSebastien DelpratAlessandro TomasinoAlessandro TomasinoRoberto MorandottiRoberto MorandottiRoberto MorandottiRiccardo Piccoli

subject

lcsh:Applied optics. PhotonicsMaterials scienceComputer Networks and CommunicationsTerahertz radiationTerahertz radiationPhysics::Optics02 engineering and technology7. Clean energy01 natural scienceslaw.invention010309 opticschemistry.chemical_compoundlawSolid-state devicesElectric field0103 physical sciencesBroadbandDynamic rangebusiness.industrylcsh:TA1501-1820021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyLaserAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsTerahertz detectorSilicon nitridechemistryOptoelectronics0210 nano-technologybusinessOrder of magnitudeVoltage

description

We present a novel class of CMOS-compatible devices aimed to perform the solid-state-biased coherent detection of ultrashort terahertz pulses, i.e., featuring a gap-free bandwidth at least two decades-wide. Such a structure relies on a 1-µm-wide slit aperture located between two parallel aluminum pads, embedded in a 1-µm-thick layer of silicon nitride, and deposited on a quartz substrate. We show that this device can detect ultra-broadband terahertz pulses by employing unprecedented low optical probe energies of only a few tens of nanojoules. This is due to the more than one order of magnitude higher nonlinear coefficient of silicon nitride with respect to silica, the nonlinear material employed in the previous generations. In addition, due to the reduced distance between the aluminum pads, very high static electric fields can be generated within the slit by applying extremely low external bias voltages (in the order of few tens of volts), which strongly enhance the dynamic range of the detected THz waveforms. These results pave the way to the integration of solid-state ultra-broadband detection in compact and miniaturized terahertz systems fed by high repetition-rate laser oscillators and low-noise, low-voltage generators.

https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5052628