Chiral photodetector based on GaAsN
R. S. Joshya, H. Carr\`ere, V. G. Ibarra-Sierra, J. C., Sandoval-Santana, V. K. Kalevich, E. L. Ivchenko, X. Marie, T. Amand, A., Kunold, A. Balocchi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel chiral photodetector based on GaAsN that directly measures light helicity through spin-dependent recombination, eliminating the need for complex optical polarization analysis.
Contribution
The work demonstrates a new method to induce chiral photoconductivity in GaAsN, enabling direct detection of light polarization without additional optical components.
Findings
GaAsN epilayers exhibit giant spin-dependent recombination.
The detector can discriminate light handedness based on conductivity.
Potential operation from visible to infra-red spectrum.
Abstract
The detection of light helicity is key to several research and industrial applications from drugs production to optical communications. However, the direct measurement of the light helicity is inherently impossible with conventional photodetectors based on III-V or IV-VI semiconductors, being naturally non-chiral. The prior polarization analysis of the light by a series of often moving optical elements is necessary before light is sent to the detector. A method is here presented to effectively give to the conventional dilute nitride GaAs-based semiconductor epilayer a chiral photoconductivity in paramagnetic-defect-engineered samples. The detection scheme relies on the giant spin-dependent recombination of conduction electrons and the accompanying spin polarization of the engineered defects to control the conduction band population via the electrons' spin polarization. As the conduction…
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