Plasmon-enhanced nonlinear wave mixing in nanostructured graphene
Joel D. Cox, F. Javier Garcia de Abajo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that doped graphene nanoislands can significantly enhance nonlinear optical wave-mixing processes at the nanoscale, offering tunable and efficient nonlinear responses across visible and near-infrared spectra.
Contribution
It introduces the use of doped graphene nanoislands for enhanced, tunable nonlinear wave mixing, surpassing metal nanoparticles in efficiency and spectral range.
Findings
High wave-mixing susceptibilities at plasmon resonances
Tunable nonlinear responses via doping control
Large polarizabilities compared to metal nanoparticles
Abstract
Localized plasmons in metallic nanostructures have been widely used to enhance nonlinear optical effects due to their ability to concentrate and enhance light down to extreme-subwavelength scales. As alternatives to noble metal nanoparticles, graphene nanostructures can host long-lived plasmons that efficiently couple to light and are actively tunable via electrical doping. Here we show that doped graphene nanoislands present unique opportunities for enhancing nonlinear optical wave-mixing processes between two externally applied optical fields at the nanoscale. These small islands can support pronounced plasmons at multiple frequencies, resulting in extraordinarily high wave-mixing susceptibilities when one or more of the input or output frequencies coincide with a plasmon resonance. By varying the doping charge density in a nanoisland with a fixed geometry, enhanced wave mixing can be…
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