Nonlinear intensity dependence of ratchet currents induced by terahertz laser radiation in bilayer graphene with asymmetric periodic grating gates
Erwin M\"onch, Stefan Hubmann, Ivan Yahniuk, Sophia Schweiss, Vasily, V. Bel'kov, Leonid E. Golub, Robin Huber, Jonathan Eroms, Kenji Watanabe,, Takashi Taniguchi, Dieter Weiss, Sergey D. Ganichev

TL;DR
This study investigates the nonlinear intensity dependence of terahertz-induced ratchet currents in bilayer graphene with asymmetric grating gates, revealing effects of electron heating and potential for high-power terahertz detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates controllable nonlinear ratchet currents in bilayer graphene devices, highlighting their application as wide-range terahertz detectors at room temperature.
Findings
Ratchet current saturates at high intensities (~hundreds kW/cm^2) at room temperature.
Nonlinearity appears at lower intensities at 4 K, with complex dependence including sign change.
Electron gas heating and interplay of Seebeck and carrier redistribution effects cause observed nonlinear behavior.
Abstract
We report on the observation of a nonlinear intensity dependence of the terahertz radiation induced ratchet effects in bilayer graphene with asymmetric dual grating gate lateral lattices. These nonlinear ratchet currents are studied in structures of two designs with dual grating gate fabricated on top of encapsulated bilayer graphene and beneath it. The strength and sign of the photocurrent can be controllably varied by changing the bias voltages applied to individual dual grating subgates and the back gate. The current consists of contributions insensitive to the radiation's polarization state, defined by the orientation of the radiation electric field vector with respect to the dual grating gate metal stripes, and the circular ratchet sensitive to the radiation helicity. We show that intense terahertz radiation results in a nonlinear intensity dependence caused by electron gas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Silicon Nanostructures and Photoluminescence · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
