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Graphene surface plasmons at the near-infrared optical regime

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posted on 2024-08-06, 09:11 authored by Qiming Zhang, Xiangping Li, Md Muntasir Hossain, Yunzhou Xue, Jingxin ZhangJingxin Zhang, Jingchao Song, Jingying Liu, Mark D. Turner, Shanhui Fan, Qiaoliang Bao, Min Gu
Graphene has been identified as an emerging horizon for a nanoscale photonic platform because the Fermi level of intrinsic graphene can be engineered to support surface plasmons (SPs). The current solid back electrical gating and chemical doping methods cannot facilitate the demonstration of graphene SPs at the near-infrared (NIR) window because of the limited shift of the Fermi level. Here, we present the evidence for the existence of graphene SPs on a tapered graphene-silicon waveguide tip at a NIR wavelength, employing a surface carrier transfer method with molybdenum trioxides. The coupling between the graphene surface plasmons and the guiding mode in silicon waveguides allows for the observation of the concentrated field of the SPs in the tip by near-field scanning optical microscopy. Thus the hot spot from the concentrated SPs in the graphene layer can be used as a key experimental signature of graphene SPs. The NIR graphene SPs opens a new perspective for optical communications, optical sensing and imaging, and optical data storage with extreme spatial confinement, broad bandwidth and high tunability.

Funding

An accelerating journey to the new era of Petabyte optical memory systems

Australian Research Council

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CE110001018:ARC

A novel graphene-based optical sensing platform

Australian Research Council

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Novel terahertz electronics, photonics and plasmonics in high-mobility, low-dimensional electronic systems (HMLDES)

Australian Research Council

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ISSN

2045-2322

Journal title

Sci. Rep.

Volume

4

Issue

5

Article number

article no. 6559

Pagination

6559-

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2014. The publisher version of this article is reproduced is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivs 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder in order to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Language

eng

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