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Enhanced amplitude modulation of a terahertz complementary vanadium dioxide metamaterial

ORAL

Abstract

Vanadium dioxide (VO2) is a dynamic quantum material that undergoes an insulator-to-metal transition (IMT) at ~340K. Integration with metamaterials yields enhanced manipulation and control of terahertz radiation which enables, as but two examples, signal modulation and tunable absorption. We introduce a complementary split ring resonator (CSRR) array integrated with a VO2 film that provides greatly increased transmission modulation at terahertz (THz) frequencies in comparison to either bare VO2 films or conventional split ring resonator arrays integrated with VO2. The amplitude modulation at ~0.5 THz is increased from 0.42 for the bare VO2 film to 0.68 for the metamaterial composite, corresponding to a 62.4% enhancement. Moreover, temperature dependent transmission measurements reveal a redshift of the resonant frequency upon traversing the IMT. Maxwell-Wagner modeling suggests that the origin of this redshift arises from a percolation induced permittivity increase in VO2 during the IMT. Our work provides a route to obtain dynamic enhancement and dielectric sensitivity that facilitates the development of tunable devices and provides a simple and effective means to investigate the local electrodynamic properties of quantum materials.

Publication: N/A

Presenters

  • Yuwei Huang

    Boston University

Authors

  • Yuwei Huang

    Boston University

  • Xuefei Wu

    Boston University

  • Jacob Schalch

    University of California, San Diego

  • Guangwu Duan

    Boston University

  • Xiaoguang Zhao

    Boston University

  • Kelson Kaj

    University of California, San Diego

  • Hai-Tian Zhang

    Purdue University

  • Roman Engel-Herbert

    Pennsylvania State University, *now at Leibniz-Institut im Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V., Germany

  • Richard D Averitt

    University of California, San Diego

  • Xin Zhang

    Boston University