Quantum-Enhanced Tunable Second-Order Optical Nonlinearity in Bilayer Graphene
Sanfeng Wu, Li Mao, Aaron M. Jones, Wang Yao, Chuanwei Zhang, Xiaodong, Xu

TL;DR
This paper theoretically demonstrates that bilayer graphene can exhibit a giant, electrically tunable second-order nonlinear optical response, promising new applications in mid-infrared photonics due to its large susceptibility and tunable resonance.
Contribution
The study reveals that AB-stacked bilayer graphene can achieve a giant, electrically tunable second-order nonlinear susceptibility, significantly surpassing traditional nonlinear materials.
Findings
(2) can be electrically tuned from 0 to ^5 pm/V.
(2) resonance wavelength tunable from .6 1d to .1 1d.
Large (2) arises from quantum-enhanced two-photon processes.
Abstract
Second order optical nonlinear processes involve the coherent mixing of two electromagnetic waves to generate a new optical frequency, which plays a central role in a variety of applications, such as ultrafast laser systems, rectifiers, modulators, and optical imaging. However, progress is limited in the mid-infrared (MIR) region due to the lack of suitable nonlinear materials. It is desirable to develop a robust system with a strong, electrically tunable second order optical nonlinearity. Here we demonstrate theoretically that AB-stacked bilayer graphene (BLG) can exhibit a giant and tunable second order nonlinear susceptibility \chi ^(2) once an in-plane electric field is applied. \chi^(2) can be electrically tuned from 0 to ~ {10^5 pm/V}, three orders of magnitude larger than the widely used nonlinear crystal AgGaSe2. We show that the unusually large \chi^(2) arises from two…
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