English

Tunable Graphene Split-Ring Resonators

Applied Physics 2020-08-05 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

A split-ring resonator is a prototype of meta-atom in metamaterials. Though noble metal-based split-ring resonators have been extensively studied, up to date, there is no experimental demonstration of split-ring resonators made from graphene, an emerging intriguing plasmonic material. Here, we experimentally demonstrate graphene split-ring resonators with deep subwavelength (about one hundredth of the excitation wavelength) magnetic dipole response in the terahertz regime. Meanwhile, the quadrupole and electric dipole are observed,depending on the incident light polarization. All modes can be tuned via chemical doping or stacking multiple graphene layers. The strong interaction with surface polar phonons of the SiO2 substrate also significantly modifies the response. Finite-element frequency domain simulations nicely reproduce experimental results. Our study moves one stride forward toward the multi-functional graphene metamaterials, beyond simple graphene ribbon or disk arrays with electrical dipole resonances only.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2008.01577,
  title  = {Tunable Graphene Split-Ring Resonators},
  author = {Qiaoxia Xing and Chong Wang and Shenyang Huang and Tong Liu and Yuangang Xie and Chaoyu Song and Fanjie Wang and Xuesong Li and Lei Zhou and Hugen Yan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2008.01577},
  year   = {2020}
}