Coherent phenomena in terahertz 2D plasmonic structures: strong coupling, plasmonic crystals, and induced transparency by coupling of localized modes
Gregory C. Dyer, Gregory R. Aizin, S. James Allen, Albert D. Grine,, Don Bethke, John L. Reno, and Eric A. Shaner

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the coherent coupling and tunability of 2D plasmonic resonators in terahertz devices, revealing phenomena like plasmonic crystals and induced transparency, with potential applications in THz detection and metamaterials.
Contribution
It introduces a method for active control of coupled 2D plasmonic resonators, including tunable plasmonic crystals and induced transparency effects, advancing terahertz device technology.
Findings
50% in situ tuning of plasmonic band edges
Observation of localized defect states and Tamm states
Demonstration of active control for THz applications
Abstract
The device applications of plasmonic systems such as graphene and two dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) in III-V heterostructures include terahertz detectors, mixers, oscillators and modulators. These two dimensional (2D) plasmonic systems are not only well-suited for device integration, but also enable the broad tunability of underdamped plasma excitations via an applied electric field. We present demonstrations of the coherent coupling of multiple voltage tuned GaAs/AlGaAs 2D plasmonic resonators under terahertz irradiation. By utilizing a plasmonic homodyne mixing mechanism to downconvert the near field of plasma waves to a DC signal, we directly detect the spectrum of coupled plasmonic micro-resonator structures at cryogenic temperatures. The 2DEG in the studied devices can be interpreted as a plasmonic waveguide where multiple gate terminals control the 2DEG kinetic inductance.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
