Grating-graphene metamaterial as a platform for terahertz nonlinear photonics
Jan-Christoph Deinert, David Alcaraz Iranzo, Raul Perez, Xiaoyu Jia,, Hassan A. Hafez, Igor Ilyakov, Nilesh Awari, Min Chen, Mohammed Bawatna,, Alexey N. Ponomaryov, Semyon Germanskiy, Mischa Bonn, Frank H.L. Koppens,, Dmitry Turchinovich, Michael Gensch, Sergey Kovalev

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a graphene-based metamaterial with a photonic grating that significantly enhances terahertz nonlinear optical effects, enabling efficient harmonic generation at room temperature for chip-scale applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel grating-graphene metamaterial platform that boosts terahertz nonlinear response, achieving large nonlinear susceptibility and high harmonic conversion efficiency.
Findings
Effective third-order nonlinear susceptibility of 3×10^{-8} m^2/V^2
Third-harmonic signal intensity increased by three orders of magnitude
Observation of harmonics up to the 9th order
Abstract
Nonlinear optics is an increasingly important field for scientific and technological applications, owing to its relevance and potential for optical and optoelectronic technologies. Currently, there is an active search for suitable nonlinear material systems with efficient conversion and small material footprint. Ideally, the material system should allow for chip-integration and room-temperature operation. Two-dimensional materials are highly interesting in this regard. Particularly promising is graphene, which has demonstrated an exceptionally large nonlinearity in the terahertz regime. Yet, the light-matter interaction length in two-dimensional materials is inherently minimal, thus limiting the overall nonlinear-optical conversion efficiency. Here we overcome this challenge using a metamaterial platform that combines graphene with a photonic grating structure providing field…
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