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Showing papers by "Stefano Dal Conte published in 2018"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the third-order nonlinear susceptibility of Graphene can be increased by almost two orders of magnitude by controlling the Fermi energy and the incident photon energy.
Abstract: Optical harmonic generation occurs when high intensity light (>1010 W m–2) interacts with a nonlinear material. Electrical control of the nonlinear optical response enables applications such as gate-tunable switches and frequency converters. Graphene displays exceptionally strong light–matter interaction and electrically and broadband tunable third-order nonlinear susceptibility. Here, we show that the third-harmonic generation efficiency in graphene can be increased by almost two orders of magnitude by controlling the Fermi energy and the incident photon energy. This enhancement is due to logarithmic resonances in the imaginary part of the nonlinear conductivity arising from resonant multiphoton transitions. Thanks to the linear dispersion of the massless Dirac fermions, gate controllable third-harmonic enhancement can be achieved over an ultrabroad bandwidth, paving the way for electrically tunable broadband frequency converters for applications in optical communications and signal processing. Gate tunable and ultrabroadband third-harmonic generation can be achieved in graphene, paving the way for electrically tunable broadband frequency converters for applications in optical communications and signal processing.

201 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the third-order nonlinear susceptibility of Graphene can be increased by almost two orders of magnitude by controlling the Fermi energy and the incident photon energy.
Abstract: Optical harmonic generation occurs when high intensity light (>1010 W m–2) interacts with a nonlinear material. Electrical control of the nonlinear optical response enables applications such as gate-tunable switches and frequency converters. Graphene displays exceptionally strong light–matter interaction and electrically and broadband tunable third-order nonlinear susceptibility. Here, we show that the third-harmonic generation efficiency in graphene can be increased by almost two orders of magnitude by controlling the Fermi energy and the incident photon energy. This enhancement is due to logarithmic resonances in the imaginary part of the nonlinear conductivity arising from resonant multiphoton transitions. Thanks to the linear dispersion of the massless Dirac fermions, gate controllable third-harmonic enhancement can be achieved over an ultrabroad bandwidth, paving the way for electrically tunable broadband frequency converters for applications in optical communications and signal processing.

152 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the nonlinear absorption of chemical vapour deposition (CVD)-grown monolayer MoSe2 in the 720-810nm wavelength range was characterized and shown to have a uniform modulation depth of ∼80 −3% and saturation intensity of ∼2.5 −1.4
Abstract: Due to their strong light-matter interaction, monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have proven to be promising candidates for nonlinear optics and optoelectronics. Here, we characterize the nonlinear absorption of chemical vapour deposition (CVD)-grown monolayer MoSe2 in the 720–810 nm wavelength range. Surprisingly, despite the presence of strong exciton resonances, monolayer MoSe2 exhibits a uniform modulation depth of ∼80 ± 3% and a saturation intensity of ∼2.5 ± 0.4 MW/cm2. In addition, pump-probe spectroscopy is performed to confirm the saturable absorption and reveal the photocarrier relaxation dynamics over hundreds of picoseconds. Our results unravel the unique broadband nonlinear absorptive behavior of monolayer MoSe2 under ultrafast excitation and highlight the potential of using monolayer TMDs as broadband ultrafast optical switches with customizable saturable absorption characteristics.

24 citations