Integration of multi-layer black phosphorus into photoconductive antennas for THz emission
M. H. Doha, J. I. Santos Batista, A. F. Rawwagah, J. P. Thompson, A., Fereidouni, K. Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, M. El-Shenawee, H. O. H. Churchill

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the fabrication and modeling of black phosphorus-based photoconductive antennas for terahertz emission, showing promising performance comparable to traditional materials and highlighting the potential for high-performance THz devices.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integration of black phosphorus into photoconductive antennas, including fabrication, characterization, and modeling, advancing THz emission technology.
Findings
Maximum photocurrent localized at antenna gap
Photoconductivity peaks at 1-2 S/cm
Device performance comparable to GaAs-based antennas
Abstract
We report the fabrication, characterization, and modeling of photoconductive antennas using 40 nm thin-film flakes of black phosphorus (BP) as the photoconductor and hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) as a capping layer to prevent oxidation of BP. Dipole antennas were fabricated on oxidized high-resistivity Si substrates, and BP and hBN flakes were picked up and transferred onto the antenna inside a nitrogen glovebox. The transfer matrix technique was used to optimize the thickness of BP and hBN for maximum absorption. BP flakes were aligned with the armchair axis along the anode-cathode gap of the antenna, with crystal orientation measured using reflection anisotropy. Photocurrent imaging under illumination with 100 fs pulses at 780 and 1560 nm showed a bias-dependent maximum photocurrent localized to the antenna gap with a peak photoconductivity of 1 (2) S/cm in the linear regime of bias…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTerahertz technology and applications · Superconducting and THz Device Technology · Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
