Gate-Tunable Optical Nonlinearities and Extinction in Graphene/LaAlO3/SrTiO3 Nanostructures

Nano Lett. 2020 Oct 14;20(10):6966-6973. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01379. Epub 2020 Sep 1.

Abstract

We explore the ultrafast optical response of graphene subjected to intense (∼106 V/cm) local (∼10 nm) electric fields. Nanoscale gating of graphene is achieved using a voltage-biased, SrTiO3-based conductive nanowire junction "written" directly under the graphene and isolated from it by an insulating ultrathin (<2 nm) LaAlO3 barrier. Upon illumination with ultrafast visible-to-near-infrared (VIS-NIR) light pulses, the local field from the nanojunction creates a strong gate-tunable second-order nonlinearity in the graphene and produces a substantial difference-frequency (DFG) and sum-frequency generation (SFG) response detected by the nanojunction. Spectrally sharp, gate-tunable extinction features (>99.9%) are observed in the VIS-NIR and SFG spectral ranges, in parameter regimes that are positively correlated with the enhanced nonlinear response. The observed graphene-light interaction and nonlinear response are of fundamental interest and open the way for future exploitation in graphene-based optical devices such as phase shifters, modulators, and nanoscale THz sources.

Keywords: LAO/STO; VIS-NIR; graphene; plasmons; terahertz spectroscopy.