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Oral: Low-loss tunable plasmonic resonances in heavily doped InAs for infrared optoelectronic devices

ORAL

Abstract

Plasmonic enhancements of optoelectronic devices, such as emitters and detectors, have traditionally used metals like gold, silver, and aluminum. However, metals are susceptible to high losses in the infrared region, limiting their usefulness for infrared devices. We overcome this problem through use of heavily doped III-V semiconductors to produce low-loss plasmonic layers that can be monolithically integrated with traditional III-V infrared optoelectronic devices during epitaxial growth. We show that a heavily tellurium-doped (ND = 7×1019 cm-3) indium arsenide (InAs) epilayer exhibits a plasma frequency that corresponds to a wavelength of 4.5 µm. We fabricated one-dimensional gratings with several pitches and linewidths up to 5 µm via photolithography and dry etching. Reflection measurements using a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer equipped with an infrared microscope show several plasmonic resonances with up to 95% absorption and quality factors around 7. Electromagnetic models based on finite element solvers provide confirmation of the experimental results, demonstrating tunable low-loss resonances for infrared optoelectrical devices.

Presenters

  • Thomas Shearer

    University of Oklahoma

Authors

  • Thomas Shearer

    University of Oklahoma

  • Ethan Darrell Caudill

    University of Oklahoma

  • Kiernan E Arledge

    University of Oklahoma

  • Tetsuya D Mishima

    The University of Oklahoma, University of Oklahoma

  • John P Murphy

    Naval Research Laboratory, United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Michael A Lloyd

    NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Jill A Nolde

    Naval Research Laboratory, United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Chase T Ellis

    United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Jesse Frantz

    Naval Research Laboratory, United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Priyantha Weerasinghe

    Amethyst Research Incorporated

  • Terry D Golding

    Amethyst Research Incorporated

  • Michael B Santos

    University of Oklahoma

  • Joseph G Tischler

    University of Oklahoma, The University of Oklahoma