Broadband optical parametric amplification by two-dimensional semiconductors
Abstract
Optical parametric amplification is a second-order nonlinear process whereby an optical signal is amplified by a pump via the generation of an idler field. It is the key ingredient of tunable sources of radiation that play an important role in several photonic applications. This mechanism is inherently related to spontaneous parametric down-conversion that currently constitutes the building block for entangled photon pair generation, which has been exploited in modern quantum technologies ranging from computing to communications and cryptography. Here we demonstrate single-pass optical parametric amplification at the ultimate thickness limit; using semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides, we show that amplification can be attained over a propagation through a single atomic layer. Such a second-order nonlinear interaction at the 2D limit bypasses phase-matching requirements and achieves ultrabroad amplification bandwidths. The amplification process is independent on the in-plane polarization of the impinging signal and pump fields. First-principle calculations confirm the observed polarization invariance and linear relationship between idler and pump powers. Our results pave the way for the development of atom-sized tunable sources of radiation with applications in nanophotonics and quantum information technology.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1912.10466,
title = {Broadband optical parametric amplification by two-dimensional semiconductors},
author = {Chiara Trovatello and Andrea Marini and Xinyi Xu and Changhwan Lee and Fang Liu and Nicola Curreli and Cristian Manzoni and Stefano Dal Conte and Kaiyuan Yao and Alessandro Ciattoni and James Hone and Xiaoyang Zhu and P. James Schuck and Giulio Cerullo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.10466},
year = {2020}
}