Newswise — The Science

Converting light from one wavelength (or “color”) to a shorter wavelength, a process needed for efficient communication and advanced manufacturing, is typically inefficient. To tackle that inefficiency, a team built a specialized, layered structure with tiny metallic cavities that improves the light conversion efficiency by orders of magnitude. The cavities can also alter other characteristics (direction and polarization) of the outgoing light beam.

The Impact

The new concept explained in the studies can open doors for advanced lasers for optical communications and efficient manufacturing. It can also support efforts to miniaturize optical components for high-speed computing, telecommunications, cameras, and quantum computing that will solve computational problems currently intractable by today’s supercomputers.

Summary

This new concept involves arrays of optical nano-cavities called metamaterials, which are added to thin-layered semiconductors (heterostructures) to allow for efficient mediation of light. A “quantum well” (a designed semiconductor heterostructure that confines charge-carrying particles—such as electrons—to two-dimensional movement with distinct energy states) is used to convert one color of laser light to another. But it has been challenging to efficiently convert the laser light due to unfavorable quantum mechanical rules for these electronic transitions. Now, researchers led by Sandia National Laboratories have made a system that effectively couples light into and out of the semiconductor quantum wells. The system creates intense light inside the quantum wells and can be designed to control the outgoing laser beam’s characteristics. In this new structure, scientists designed nano-cavities following metamaterials concepts and fabricated the cavities on top of the semiconductor structure. The scientists designed the gold “C”-shaped nano-cavities to have special “resonance” frequencies that force the laser light to obey the rules imposed by the electronic transitions. When the resonance frequencies are made equal to the inter-subband transition energy, very efficient coupling of light into the quantum wells is achieved and light at twice the frequency (a process known as second-harmonic-generation) is generated inside the quantum well. Because the cavities were also designed to have a resonance at the new frequency, the nano-cavities efficiently radiate the light outwards. Another interesting feature of the nano-cavities is that their arrangement on the surface allows one to determine the outgoing laser beam’s shape and polarization. This allows for new capabilities to control optical beams, creating new functionality. The design of the nano-cavities and choice of the “quantum wells” allows for arbitrary shapes and energies of the resulting beam—across most of the infrared spectrum which can be useful for a wide range of applications.

Funding

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science (Office of Basic Energy Sciences) and the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, a DOE Office of Science User Facility.

Publications

O. Wolf, S. Campione, A. Benz, A. P. Ravikumar, S. Liu, T. S. Luk, E. A. Kadlec, E. A. Shaner, J. F. Klem, M. B. Sinclair, and I. Brener, "Phased-array sources based on nonlinear metamaterial nanocavities." Nature Communications 6, 7667 (2015). [DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8667].

O. Wolf, A. A. Allerman, X. Ma, J. R. Wendt, A. Y. Song, E. A. Shaner, and I. Brener, “Enhanced optical nonlinearities in the near-infrared using III-nitride heterostructures coupled to metamaterials.” Applied Physics Letters 107, 151108 (2015). [DOI: 10.1063/1.4933332].

Journal Link: Nature Communications 6, 7667 (2015). [DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8667] Journal Link: Nature Communications 6, 7667 (2015). [DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8667]