Credit: Evgenii Sheshin et al./Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology
Russian researchers from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT) and Valiev Institute of Physics and Technology have demonstrated resonant absorption of terahertz radiation in commercially available graphene. This is an important step toward designing efficient terahertz detectors, which would enable faster internet and a safe replacement for X-ray body scans. The research findings were published in Physical Review Applied.
Graphene optoelectronics
Since Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov received the 2010 Nobel Prize in physics for studying the unique electronic properties of graphene, the interest toward this material has never waned. Graphene is truly two-dimensional: It consists of a one-atom-thick layer of carbon, which is one of the reasons why its properties are so amazing. It is thin but mechanically strong, impermeable even to helium atoms, and conducts electricity and heat extremely well. The high mobility of electrons in graphene makes it a promising material for ultrafast photodetectors, including those operating in the terahertz range.
THz radiation, also known as T-waves, is equally difficult to generate and to detect. This gave rise to the notion of a “terahertz gap,” which refers to the roughly 0.1-10 THz frequency band in the electromagnetic spectrum. There are no efficient devices for generating and detecting radiation in this range. Nevertheless, T-waves are very important for humanity: They do not harm the body and so could replace X-rays in medical scans. Also, T-waves could make Wi-Fi much faster and unlock a poorly studied band of cosmic radiation for astronomical research.
Despite the great potential of graphene for photodetection, its monolayer by itself absorbs only about 2.3% of external radiation, which is not enough for reliable detection. A way around this is to strongly localize the field near graphene, forcing an electromagnetic wave to couple with graphene electrons and excite resonant oscillations. The resulting collective wave of the electromagnetic field and conduction electrons is known as a surface plasmon. The corresponding phenomenon of plasmon resonance is the enhanced light absorption due to the excitation of surface plasmon waves.
Unfortunately, this phenomenon is not observed in a continuous sheet of a conductor illuminated with plane waves. The plasmon wavelength is too short compared with that of the photon, that’s why these two waves can hardly be synchronous. To address this disparity, a metal grating is placed above the graphene film. It resembles a tiny comb with teeth less than a micrometer apart.
Graphene: Expectations vs. reality
Dozens of techniques are available for producing graphene. They differ in terms of end product quality and labor intensity. Researchers praising the high electron mobility in graphene have often played down how difficult this material is to manufacture.
The highest-quality graphene is produced by mechanical exfoliation. This involves placing a piece of graphite between two sticky tapes, which then rip off progressively thinner layers in multiple iterations. At some point, fragments of graphene — that is, monolayer graphite — emerge. Such “handmade” graphene has the best characteristics for applied devices, such as the resonant T-wave detector based on encapsulated graphene created by researchers from MIPT, Moscow State Pedagogical University, and the University of Manchester. Unfortunately, graphene flakes manufactured by mechanical exfoliation are only micrometers across, take several months to produce, and end up too expensive for serial device design.
There is an easier and scalable alternative technique for graphene synthesis called chemical vapor deposition (CVD). It involves decomposing gases — normally, a mix of methane, hydrogen, and argon — in a special furnace. The process leads to a graphene film forming on a copper or nickel substrate. The resulting graphene has poorer characteristics and more defects than the mechanically exfoliated one. But CVD is currently the technology best-suited for scaling up device production.
The Russian physicists set out to test whether such commercial-grade graphene is good enough for THz plasmon resonance excitation, which would make it a valid material for T-wave detectors.
“Actually, a CVD-produced graphene film is not homogeneous. Like a polycrystal, it consists of numerous merged grains. Each one is an ordered region with a completely symmetrical atomic pattern. Grain boundaries, along with defects, make working with such graphene far from easy,” study co-author and MIPT graduate student Elena Titova said.
It took the team over a year to master working with CVD graphene at the Institute’s Center of Shared Research Facilities. Meanwhile, the colleagues from the lab’s theoretical department were convinced that no plasmon resonance would be observed. The reason is that resonance visibility is determined by the so-called quality factor — that is, how many periods the field passes before the electron encounters a lattice defect. Theoretical estimates predicted a very low Q factor limited by frequent electron-defect collisions in CVD graphene. That said, the high electron mobility in graphene emerges not due to infrequent electron collisions, but due to a low mass of electrons, which enables their fast acceleration to a high velocity.
Theory and experiment
Despite the pessimistic theoretical predictions, the authors of the paper decided to still do the experiment. Their resolve was rewarded: The absorption spectra exhibited the peaks indicative of plasmon resonance in CVD-synthesized graphene.
“The thing is that not all defects are the same, and electrons collide with different defects in direct current measurements and THz absorption measurements,” comments the research supervisor, Dmitry Svintsov, who heads the MIPT Laboratory of 2D Materials for Optoelectronics. “In a DC experiment, an electron will inevitably encounter grain boundaries on the way from one electrical contact to the other. But when exposed to T-waves, it will mostly fluctuate within a single grain, away from its boundaries. This means that defects impairing DC conductivity are actually ‘safe’ for T-wave detection.”
A further mystery had to do with the frequency of resonant plasmon excitation, which disagreed with the previously existing theories. It turned out to be related to the geometry of the metal grating in an unexpected way. The team found that when positioned close to graphene, the grating (depicted in orange in figure 1) modified the plasmon field distribution. This led to plasmon localization under the “comb teeth,” whose edges acted as mirrors for plasmons. The researchers formulated a very simple theory describing the phenomenon based on an analogy with the tight-binding model from solid-state physics. The theory reproduces the experimental data well without resorting to fitting parameters and can be used to optimize future T-wave detectors.
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