Nonlinear light mixing by graphene plasmons
Abstract
Graphene is known to possess strong optical nonlinearity. Its nonlinear response can be further enhanced by graphene plasmons. Here, we report a novel nonlinear electro-absorption effect observed in nanostructured graphene due to excitation of graphene plasmons. We experimentally detect and theoretically explain enhanced nonlinear mixing of near-infrared and mid-infrared light in arrays of graphene nanoribbons. Strong compression of light by graphene plasmons implies that the effect is non-local in nature and orders of magnitude larger than the conventional local graphene nonlinearity. The effect can be used in variety of applications including nonlinear light modulators, light multiplexors, light logic, and sensing devices.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1705.09739,
title = {Nonlinear light mixing by graphene plasmons},
author = {D. Kundys and B. Van Duppen and O. P. Marshall and F. Rodriguez and I. Torre and A. Tomadin and M. Polini and A. N. Grigorenko},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.09739},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
15 pages, 4 figures