Room temperature broadband coherent terahertz emission induced by dynamical photon drag in graphene
J. Maysonnave, S. Huppert, F. Wang, S. Maero, C. Berger, W. de Heer,, T.B. Norris, L.A. De Vaulchier, S. Dhillon, J. Tignon, R. Ferreira, J., Mangeney

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates broadband coherent terahertz emission from graphene at room temperature, induced by a dynamical photon drag effect, highlighting the importance of next-nearest-neighbor couplings and electron-hole dynamics.
Contribution
It reveals that dynamical photon drag in graphene can generate ultra-broadband terahertz radiation, expanding the potential for room-temperature terahertz sources.
Findings
Broadband terahertz emission (0.1-4 THz) observed in graphene.
Dynamical photon drag effect is key to the emission.
Next-nearest-neighbor couplings influence the process.
Abstract
Nonlinear couplings between photons and electrons in new materials give rise to a wealth of interesting nonlinear phenomena. This includes frequency mixing, optical rectification or nonlinear current generation, which are of particular interest for generating radiation in spectral regions that are difficult to access, such as the terahertz gap. Owing to its specific linear dispersion and high electron mobility at room temperature, graphene is particularly attractive for realizing strong nonlinear effects. However, since graphene is a centrosymmetric material, second-order nonlinearities a priori cancel, which imposes to rely on less attractive third-order nonlinearities. It was nevertheless recently demonstrated that dc-second-order nonlinear currents as well as ultrafast ac-currents can be generated in graphene under optical excitation. The asymmetry is introduced by the excitation at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTerahertz technology and applications · Photonic and Optical Devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
