Resonant Visible Light Modulation with Graphene
Renwen Yu, Valerio Pruneri, and F. Javier Garcia de Abajo

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel method for fast visible and near-infrared light modulation using graphene's electro-optical properties within engineered optical cavities, achieving high transmission variation and potential for high-speed optical devices.
Contribution
It introduces a graphene-based modulation technique that leverages cavity resonances to achieve significant light transmission changes at gigahertz and terahertz speeds.
Findings
Transmission variation exceeds 90%
Extinction ratio >15 dB
Feasible material parameters for high-speed modulation
Abstract
Fast modulation and switching of light at visible and near-infrared (vis-NIR) frequencies is of utmost importance for optical signal processing and sensing technologies. No fundamental limit appears to prevent us from designing wavelength-sized devices capable of controlling the light phase and intensity at gigaherts (and even terahertz) speeds in those spectral ranges. However, this problem remains largely unsolved, despite recent advances in the use of quantum wells and phase-change materials for that purpose. Here, we explore an alternative solution based upon the remarkable electro-optical properties of graphene. In particular, we predict unity-order changes in the transmission and absorption of vis-NIR light produced upon electrical doping of graphene sheets coupled to realistically engineered optical cavities. The light intensity is enhanced at the graphene plane, and so is its…
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